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Eve Peblished Daily Except Sunday py tho Press Publishing Company. Nos. 68 to 63 Park, Ro New York, BANGUS 101. Pres. and Treen, JOSEP PULITZER Junior, Beo'y 63 Park Kow, vout-Olfice at New, York a9 Second-Ciasy Matter, : Th eh, ‘ening | For Towiand and. the Continent 96 ‘orld tor United States 1 AN Countries in) the, Invervauiones | and Canada wl Unto $3.80) One Vor. cee -o VOLUME 52..... ‘ eves »NO, 18,235. | FOR HEALTH AND PLEASURE. | ATTERS of food and drink, and in a scarcely less degree of medicine, are important | and immediate of everyday life, univer- concerns | sally. Some materialist philosophers would make} them the whole thing. It is notorious that generals over- | eat, or imbibe injudicious-| ly, and lose momentous battles; that the settling of great diplomatic questions | is oftenest accomplished through conviviality; that! a critic is linble to have dyspepsia, and cut up a meritorious masterpiece; that matches made iu heaven are oftentimes broken, and end in the other place, all through bad meals; and that lives which the world can ill spare are | sacrificed because of malnutrition or inadequate medical ministration. | Besides, the pleasures of the table are about the surest thing we) have, next to spiritual uplift, to make life livable. For this reason the National Pure Food Law of 1906 wns per- haps the farthest-reaching hygienic measure ever enacted in this or any other country. We all wish to believe that “cheats never prosper,” and that with regard to traflic in foodstuffs, as everything else, in the end the true, the ethical and the just will prevail. At the eame timo it is | certain that this still distant and Utopian end is hurried along by the work of Dr. Harvey W. Wiley and his associate food-detectives in the chemistry bureau of the United States Government’s Department of Agriculture. Within a period of little more than three years the Board of Food and Drug Inspection has brought into the courts and obtained judgment, with fines and penalties, upon no less than a thousand specific cases of wholesaie food adulteration or other viola- tions of the pure food law. There are three principal ways in which the packer, dealer or rnggist can defraud and injure the consumer—and too often these three tricke are all worked at once. They are: (1) Harmful adul- teration; (2) adulteration by use of chemical germicides, or cold-stor- age preservation, which, if not directly injurious, is ao indirectly, by des.roying the flavor of food and making it unpalatable; (3) short weight. All these fraudulent practices have been, and to some extent a ag achieved through the now illegal and punishable use of false 6. The desperate fight which unscrupulous purveyors and druggis' @re now putting up against Dr. Wiley and his official associates is ged chiefly on the second of the categories hore specified—namely, the employment of alleged harmless preservatives and cold storage. | These devices save time and expense, but the most superficial analysis | suffices to show that they iro in vogue not for the benefit of the! consumer, but as a means of enriching the packer and dealer. Even! the comparatively innocent custom of “floating” oysters, or soaking | them in fresh water to make them plump and clean-look denounced by the Govern- ggg ment’s experts as a species of adulteration, because it destroys the flavor and palatability of the product to say nothing of aggra- vating the danger from typhoid germs. When it is considered that the censorship of the National Board of Food and Drug Inspection cov- ers everything on the table from milk, butter, eggs, meats and canned goods, down to olive oil, spaghetti, nuts, confectionery, soda water and gelatine flavors and coloring, min- eral waters, and the various feeds of horses and chickens, it becomes easy to answer the current question, Who is trying to “get” Dr. Wiley and his lieutenants? ner, jg etranely | a 4 |e World Dail Cupid’s Pranks. By Maurice Ketten. | WANT To MARRY 4 NICE LITTLE Gu WITH veRy UTE a Ry LAW — | IF PossiBue, NO MOTHER in LAW AT au or HLULGET You / Tusk THe Gike aTRINONIAL, BUREAU ut MEET You REMEMBER THe DAY MAKE IT 'y GET AAD pont TEN MINUTES HUBBY SHE WiLL Copyright, 191: y Magazine, Tuesday. July ¢ BE MAD THE ST OF yout Copyright, 1011. by Pree Publishing Company, (New York World.) i! This Volume Is Affectionately Inscribed {| to My Dearest Sweetheart of Them All—the Only One Who Has Not Jilted Me— MY FUTURE WIFE (God Onty Knows Who She Is.) NO. I, - GUSSIE. USSIE was my first love; or, rather, wiv was the first of whom ft Rave any definite recollection, I have no doubt that t loved others vefore | Guasie, for 1 am convinced it is an affliction 1 was born with. ) We were both seven years old, and in our first year at sohool, Guasie was @ pretty little girl, with real golden hair, and light Blue | €ves; an@ when 1 thiak of her now, 1 flatter myself that 1 had good taste, even je that tender age. Concealment, like « worm’ the bud, never fed fot long on my damask cheek, TRICKED FT patient ow aes, Wo | It wan a very short time after I had conceived a fondness for Gussie that she DADS Nene doer te met fou, HELIEVE found it out. My first move was to give her some pretty picture cards, such D CRE LOOK, ELOPE wins / | the various card companies in the East used to send out as samples. OWN TwE STAIRS Ly: HER Quick. The price per dozen was printed on them, where the nanie belonged, and this was covered with a beautiful embossed scrap picture in. bright colors, I bad received @ dosen of these from a cousin of mine in the country, and I treasured them very highly. But my love for Gussie was so ardent that 1 was willing to divide even this treasure with her—prudently reserving half of them for « future contingency. 1 wrapped them up neatly in @ piece of writing paper, wrote her name oa the outside and dropped them on her desk in passing. Gussie blushed @ little, and very cautiously she examined my offering. She seemed to be pleased, and ;that made me very happy indeed. Yo agitated was 1, that for the firat time f lomt the place tn our reading lesson and had to stay in for it; but to please Gussie. 1 fait, was worth aven auch disgrace. Orr H A Lover's First Gift—Unrewarded! H ow the question was, what would Gussie do about it? ‘The pictures were certainly pretty enough, 1 reasoned, and they could imean oniy one thing to fe-that 1 loved her. Knowing this, of course Gussie would now Jov | It did not once occur to me that {i could possioly be otherwise, Perhaps she Would even reciprocate with a handsome present to me. Upon tile prospece did my imagination dwell with no uricertain relish Gussie was always prettily dressed, and 1 fancied she was very rien Who thought 1, what lavish return my tribute might invoke trom her. Se L myselt tp walt for Gussle'y move, to snow vain 1 awaited further developments to justify my exp the ardor of my sult. Gusiie did not give me anytoing, her devotion to me, tw tutions und encourage she neither breathed Nor penned nor with expressive glance con Love's tender message whica 1 craved She did not even thank me for my princely gift. " Naturally optimistic, and especially inclined to ve enariiavle in my @atle | mate of Gussie, 1 soon came to the conclusion that only i was to blame for tim | painful hitch in the proceedings. Gusste, no doudi, was accustomed to receive |auch Ittle attentions, and disposed to consider them liguily. Vernaps, after eit 1 had not made it sufticiently clear that 1 loved her, and my gift to her migat require some definite expianation. At least 1 could not afford to part with ex fine pictures like that without making every effort tu have soime satisfaction for | What seemed to me an extremely void demonstration } 1 had noticed that other boys and girls in my class often pasyed notes to |eaoh other, and 1 had heard them referred to as love ui Here, thought wan clearly the key to the altuation. 1 could not hope to win Gussie's love, ce: j tainly, unless | were up to date and could write her a 1 Able love note, But how was this to be done—how to degin it, and what to @ay—this pusvied | me indeed. | orem tae lace ; 81d Fate of a Ten- Word Love Letter. { With all my sentiment, mine was essenually a practical nature; and after much perplexity, 1 resolved that the best i could do was to state my case as by The Press Publishing On, (The New York World), By Roy L. McCardell. 20d she turned out all the lights but) one an@ stalked away I!ke the success- | ful conspirator sho was. ridge—Ciara, 1 mean!” he stammered, ; for he felt a remonstrating arm around | his neck, "I have lived a terrible life. | “I didn't know it was you, Miss Mud-| You must have heard of it?” tas But aclve, re- | dut 1d Miss Mudridge, solved to force the issue, ning you called me ‘Clara. “And you called me ‘Jack is with you | gain When \they { | you that there 1s no} |hope. Hut he blundered on, weaving | 1 “he re-|the meshes of the net tighter around | before he in Mra, Jarr’s front ket away to tell you make me love you so? know {t. You see, it would be criminal Mr. Silver couldn't think why he did Mr. Jarr Acts as First Aid to the Lovelorn by Herding a Scared Bachelor to a Cruel Fate a sigh of WV briefly and plainly as 1t could be put Into words, I tore a sheet from my tablet, took my pencil with me end sought the seclusion of the barn, where 1 thought myself secure from embarrassed interruption, Down on my knees, with aa empty feed-box for a table, 1 scrawied this message T love you. That's why I gave you those pictures 1 realized that thia was a very short note, bur I felt that ground. At least, I had nothing else of importance to communtoat Pi) just folding tt up neatly when Walter, that meddlesome twin brother of min ved on the scene, like some evil genius, and snatched the precious mi Mudridge, tenderly ut nrmty. “PP&* from me. now nothing will sh - « shake my re "To be tn love, I felt, T will stick to you, let the world very sweet; but to have any ne at home find It out, j@ay what i: will” was disgraceful. ‘To no purpose did I plead with my vodurate brother: the deluge Iss Mmup.| "480" said Mr. Silver weakly, his eye| “The more need of the affection of a) Fou shall not!" erled Mr. Silver in of my bitter, angry tears failed to soften his heart, and even when L tried tu |¥POn the single light, and wondering |congtant heart,” whispered Miss Mud. | despair, ee auand GENE i ne GUiGUAIE(and neratonod) meat every, Dont: Tangle and |{f Re could summon up courage enough | ridge. coming | closer. Before. | But f will. Nothing sisal! shake my | He would fix me he would, Wasn't I ashamed of myself? Ie would tell on 4 othe: |thought oniy of my own fou replied the uil-sacrificing girl. a i | eu /Aldit RiVRiR RRO egy iceeesiny 'y formal this evening, |™y own selfiah love; but now I | And Jack Sliver reaitzed he wasup | Me sure. Who was this I loved, and what pictures did T give as T¢0ig) Et t Awful! And they were a present from my © away? 1 had kept six, I said. He didn't be} contritely, hoping to appease him, and th by avel jscandal, I led him to the box containing my trea isin, too, Did I give them ail me-I must show him, Very the spread of this grevious 8, and there displayed the NT break tt to Williamson, the helpless man. been with me so long." plied, The words were ou him. | _ “He won't be with you much jonges ictures I had left. the first confidant | reaiizea their import, and his freedom | “Bur it must not be!" he cried fatu-|#ald the falr Mas Mudridge stently, %% ictures ‘ ; whe should meet|/was a thing of the past! Miss Mud- ously. “Listen, nobody knows it, but| "Tie wretch! tt wan hs who hee par, ‘Then and there my brother exhibited a senerolenip-whlgh so:@ay:t anetomaas how, with all her| ridge put her head on his shoulder and| the truth {s Iam an alcoholic, @ secret | the wine cup to your tips!” | and admire as much as I deplored it then, Having learned my little secret, he boasting, Clara! murmured faintly, “O ek, why do| drunkard! Even my, valet dors not) The @ptived bachelor thought with| would make the most of his advantage. If I would give him the remaining ex iitamson’s excellent high | pictures, 1 eould have my note back, and he would not tell on me. To have him | found | Mra, Rangle’ for me to marry a girl Ike you!’ “Now you have shown me you DO need me. Were !t otherwise I might jnot give up everything for you, .ny |home, my mother, my. friends," said ROY L MOCARDELL ver was too smart to be trapped into an engagement with her, For wnenhe Clara Mudrt was at the when he had called he had rum ft. He only realized that bachelor Gays were numbered unless he could eave himself, and he began to hedge. “Pm not worthy of you, Miss Mud- Boy Scouts Puzzle. By Sam Loyd. Jarr Mra, Jarr suspectec what was in mind, The match had been of HER making. She would not allow {t to go by default if she could prevent tt. Furthermore, Mrs. Jare had ed to relleve the embarrassed Mudridge of the obdloquy of being 3 noon as Mr. A QUATRAIN ON THE QUESTION. The subway discussion, still up in the air, continues a mess and a muddle for fair! begun them, then may Letters F Let's finish the diggings, now that we've © somehow we can manage to run them. rom the People | Jarr tells him you are here, he'll rug right back” said [Mra Jarr consolingly to Miss Mud- ue. e's always that way about nie tn if he thinks | Hut if he knew It} lors are fust Ike that," anid Mrs Rangle, to show she was not 4 celved, “After showing a girl atten ons, they Tun aWay before they ton deen Poor Miss Mudridee onty etmperet end Md her chargrin with a brave show of Indifference, And then, to her! P fov and te the evertasting con: | tvs! Mrs. Renate, Mr. Jarr was ing up the stairs accompanted | Lean Sharks, a me, hundred r. at any rate, 4 as To knew it, Clara, dear’ erted Mrs. | at nsiderate sometime Jorr staking all on the hope,” had expe » numerous | FUSING In wit eagerne 1 Jack Silver heard you’ were| Joan sharks, I am he pub’ Soot of ad A. M. barge: ante 4 back ; He’ wild adou poe es charge from|‘? be shown this and that with © always wald a0. decareful. They » a nary hed ‘ thought for the tire iy sang | Mrs Teongle sniffed, and commenced W per cent. upward for a loan, The ee annE fOr the shred arms and| co esstch sarouhd na. Pameeances, ere city employees who MO ANOY BM ne cay have e "4 | gome elushle young female friend or! their positions in the clutches of X bd w id ‘i es nm constant ©) relative who might ¥ moet the well- h harks, anee, i gd Du not Ve AS easy fo: to-do bachelor and capture him. ny pa degpag be eman gets his uniform he{t? Hehten the loaa «already | Wor tt was evident that he was weak probably hasn't the money to buy itand | © Ing And when a bachelor begin to © the mone ides, who a | Pinte wenken be ts any girl's prey, Whom a a0. J stores {| could xhe set at Why not be a oi cover a 6 | erying responsible for his fall and capture, Then when pa rolls wrou Riek Gas cine ee hole hour) yather than Mra. Jarre policeman has ¢ erest, becau ke to heat wate té fneuwh? LT would! “Rut Mra. Rangle had not thought of Mf he doesn't be will vot get @ joan a ike cee me er readers’ views! @ able young female campaigner second time. A w me MOO BUDIOCL KWo M | wren the two men came tn. fieptthe vam ateeL ts Mra. Jarr was quick to aot. After Jeventh Uourt Shoppers. bid it usual greetings were over, she yn To The Evening World ‘a and remarked: HEN the Boy Scouts held thelr) to produce three totals of 71 points. To the Edivor enteg World To Whose reat te dis Well, 1m the young folks have big tarwe: s which resulted] Can you do it? Mag tbe permitted a liste space to 4 ‘val of garbage at|#omething to say to each other and tn a tle between Gen. Dick, Coll ANSWER TO MONKEY ARITH- call attention to | eat injustice Sussest Chat they put {don't Want to be bothered by @ tot of|Tom and Capt. Henry considerable at-| sprig pUZZLE: te daily committed against employees of ; ST knahane Sri ey old marvied folks Let's go eur} gument arose as to wo made the bull's mee Vm $ ; e neon Wor (Urns | into Aining yoom.* ngers and « some stor vo v ” at fa think § t th we t an ay en to hours ¥+) would be a go ef ve sg . ae. hee se ber ell You it was nowlndged aioe ‘They wre expected to be ovliming dweller to du the sa e ally those gle b her down the hai, | Oo? geared 11 pointe in six at what they show unfaung co yw pe ving nea ne, It cgrtainly hem headed safely in the} NOW it Involves quite , an.ootamal aye semames uade *t gy ing come | would bely io deaden toe noe@which, right direction, abe turned back and|BUale for (he reason (iat it es tatnguring by th Hons Yet just at closing tine, When) comumed With thy heat, is makigfe sleep | paid to the young couple, “It'e so dread-|e0me litle ingenulty to pick ou the a | 1H eg Whey ase Jovking forward’ to geting) impvesivin io pulse city, eM | uly werw hore with al) these lightst” | counts which sach one mus, bave made ‘Derefore 8,667 equals i0lk, wt = balls, groaned and guve up the figh! When the exultant girl kissed Mrs. Tight it was seen that aha wee” Hoe! | ne would give her the rest of the picture Jarry, Mr. Jarr and Mrs. Ri ing Mr, Silver's star sapphire ring. t wi hand the anon kiss keeping The Silences. By Cora M. W. Greenleaf. | “How shallow runs speech!" | vociferous, discordant tones, Whose chattering | reach In widening circles over stones Of thought; each idea an excuse To iift the gate, loose, |The brookiet gurgling on tt | In swirling, frothy , Gives little heed to what As we do, making ( way violence, twill say, ) eloquence-— ‘The soul impr’ too big for her, but she kept | on the third finger of the |than to make a by hand the stream of oes spread and and turn the waters! | \tell on me loomed up so terribly that 1 was glad to accept his terms. The | bargain concluded, be boldly confessed that Gussic was his sweet that she cared nothing for me, agd |1 might as well forget about her as quickly as possibie. With that bold, scheming brother contesting the fleld with me, I knew better further overtures to Gussie, ‘The next day I made a face at | her and felt myself avenged. And within a week I lad won the affections of another picturesque lasste with bright red hair and freckles to matoh, who chewed gum tn a surprisingly artistic manter, and who liad most relentlessly spurned the advances of several boys much larger than myself. (To Be Continued.) Just a Glimpse Into The New York Shops T™ new importations in every line] attac ed ornaine 8 bo« are ich as dog figures, s with the latter deeo- Mg offered at of dress and {ts accessories em-| F ratlu vt Indian style phasize the new 1 [A vabble of incessant sound note, and especially prominent are the] sojething new in pict rames are PY masquerades for wisdom, deep, metal effects. New belis carrying o:t! thogo of embossed 1 wittr proto this {dea have fancy, flat. gilt squares! an ivory-like tance th es the Hiow shallow runs the stream of linked together and ribvon drawn beautiful ton Huding from cream to speech! through. brown, which are an lient repro- When sorrow ‘wakes within the heart,| The long ends fall gracefully down duction of old ivory ey are sold When sirong emotions upward reach | the front and side and are finished off | under the name of ¢ at 8 cents. | ‘To rend the gates of speech apart.| with a fancy metal ornament. They ‘rhe tittle dry battery electric etocke | Anu helpless, try in vain to tell their| sell at $1.60. O70 ® reat SOnYenienSs GDe Lek aiee woe. Heol linings that will obviate the tains about 1.80) flies sella at $7 per @ipping of the shoe, which causes such| Pretty silver wire tea strainers with in. loving words that breathe and | faeonventence to the wearer, can b@ a glass, silver rimmed receptac | had in both tan and black soft leather! pe hod at $1.00 |ssow shallow rune the stream of; .1 19 cents a pair. They can also be! Baking shells in which such delight: speech | used to replace worn-out linings. can be made are | When souls, dumbstricken, yearn 89) 4 feather-weight card table 1s one of sell te God the convenlences for the out-of-door —_—— —-— Stript of the language ease and pleas-| 10, at can easily be packed {nto a The “Borax King." ure teach, | trunk for travelling purposes, and when ¢ ng. We yearn to talk when bowed beneath | oeiea forms a table that would even HRTY yea 4 raged young the rod; \}ook well in a drawing room. stood by hts rude To cry out loud, t0 ecream the soul's) “Covered in green imitation leather o eabin on a hill ta Novada, watele desire, ; felt they sell at $3.45. An eopectally ate) ine a Ming ss wists dies ant pasiite When undergoing grief'e refining | tractive Iine covered tn tapestry are 8. {P om in tage upon the backs of burmem \erow shallow rune the stream of Handsome folding writing desks. /q16 hoard but one Word, “boran’” Pro | speech!” | tully equipped, are most attractive in| pecting hinvelf, found end Yet robbed of !t-on, helpless ignor- | their red leather furnishings and soll at | marketed 20.1% t f the white | poy) | 35,60. {Then he eat A poor thing, yeu but ‘tie our own, | A collapsible stool of wicker, with found the sayiiy ier! } to preach |red leather cushion top to match the 31.113 OO, This reti = | Or prose, or hide our thoughts in seif- | desk finish, \s $8.7 |Bmith, known as the “Horax King” to- defense. i The new metal additions to desk ets) day, ts credited now with a cagital ef joned Ir ‘= walls of day Thus sigoas oue anotuer day by day, show the smooth or plain finish and the! gxt,000,000, whi ithe expects to telple tm | decoration {a often in the form of em ten years, " 2 ioneeeciitlal