The evening world. Newspaper, June 21, 1912, Page 23

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Rr Te Te RR oe ae NR om a VYhe Bvening Worid waily Magaz A gfe eens emeememnn e ine, rriday, 1912 ‘“*S’Matter, Pop?’’ BG CsEs-) - Jai But tHe RED DEMONS WERE NOT To TRIUMPH SO BASIL Y BUFFALO! + TSILL AND DANIEL BOONE. \ {Ne te | WERE Close TY , \TOCATCH IT INDIANS WERE SmAcL bats — MATTERS To THEM THleee | "HAD To RE AT LEAST Zo IN A TSUNCH TREFORE | THEY COULD NOTICE i THEM HUH * Poor Poor! AW WHAT YA SCAIRT OF, AINT YA NEVER GONNA TRE A MAN *° ALMALI IKE WAS PICKING HIS WAY DOWN GRIZZLY GuLcry ADEAFENING 1) |[WAR-wHOO? SOUNDED IN +18 RIGHT EAR, ( SIGNS OF THE FOREST He CouLd READ INSTANTLY, THERE WERE INDIANS ABOUT) Quit ACTION was IMPERAT ve. INDIANS | ARE DANGEROUS 17 | WAS A SITUATION | To TRY THE NERVES OF This GREAT HUNTER) So Je Bear | | \ UGH uGH ME T31G CHIEF “wHooP ? so THEY Aue ny AGAIN THAT aie Raising {[Sound! THEY NEEDED DICTA GRAPH ] TO THeim EXPERIENCE! EARS IT INDICATED THE PRESENCE OF AT LEAST BS REDSKINS Reartis The Honeymooners by James Alden, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World). 2.—Furnishing the Flat. WEN Helen and Warren re= i] turned from their honeymoon they decided they must fur- nish a flat and set up house- keeping for themselves, gurgled Helen, at howls or Ferocious HAMLET choo "Marven 2 well nom wee Ista — There's A RAT mi das Wel, SEE Suc Me cart CLEAN IT OUT Copyright, 10 Warren seemed inclined to ge: an oak . lovey, get the mission set""— Helen, precious, mission will And I don’t want you Poor LiL “But show tho dust. to have to soll your ‘ittly bittly hannies| wif a dust ray. Of course, lovey, I for-| get; I shall get a maid for you". ' Gee! 0 Me Sa IAT OLO RATS whenever we eat restaurants a lot of stupid, jealous, Ice- old fossils make comments just because we hold hands,” And so Helen and W the furniture section of a gi partment stove. “Now for the Kitchen,” exclaimed Hel- “Just to think, my ownest “Oh, no, Warren, never! I'm not going to have any horrid maid around the house trying to steal you. I know she couldn't help loving you madly and —and"—— Here Helen showed signs of sobbing. Warren clasped Helen in his arms and} en set out for it de- going to be your Uttle house-| kissed away thé tears. “He valid Warren to the clerk, see,’ mused Helen, gazing | “we'll take this mission set and that about the wilderness of kitchen utensils. Uttle settee’ that doesn't go with the dining room net, sir"— | ‘Well, MAKE it go with tt," ordered Warren, sir.” sald the clerk, “Oh, Warren, you just ought to be the head of the army. You are so won- derful and strong and commanding—but I'd never let you be a soldier, Let's) pick out some pictures.” “All right, my ownest own. Here’ beautiful ‘Psyche at the Pool. us"—— “Oh, Warren, what's the trouble over there? We's CAUGHT Two. Awe at ewuple carried tl te ir asked employees clerk away. Mr. Seller, the clerk, Is taken sud. niy fl, sir"? | And as Helen and Warren wandered | into another department one of the! cle said to another: | Seller's in a bad wi Warren a came over a‘ “What a funny clerk, dear!” “Of course you big men know nothing of this, Warren dearie, but we wom do, Look here, Mr, Clerk, 1 shall want » o#S cups, a chafing dish and a coffee percolater.” “Yes, Miss-er Mrs." answered the clerk, “And ‘how about bread tins and ewko pans and dish tins and ple plates a uulmeg graters” “Merey me! How foolishly you talk! , What 1 have ordered will be suffl- ent, won't It, Warren love “Lam snre it will, m. P 4 biscuit 1 flour sifters and honey. We can} The Saleswoman o ything in the ¢ i peer aa And the Shopper Ban ee Ae av lovarsuihnetanen By Sophie Irene Loeb A million billion dollars if only he Copyright, | Guess Hes 17 WA CANYO TRESOUNDED WITH THe CRY OF TATTLE THE WAR Doe WAS LOOSE IN THE LAND S THEN THAT NS AND PRAIRIE THE INDIANS Ra TICED TO THEIR STRONEHoRDSL WHT CHARACTRRIIT SUPP ENNESS-= THe, CHASE - THE CRY OF THe BeSiG6e D-SucH IS LIFE IN THE GREAT, WEST G:DE) 4 YM" KILLED Him ENoucH NOW, So WELL RATTIE! Epoch Makers IN MEDICINE By ]. A. Hasih, M. D. By Cal. John (Pobiial tec by Asthority of the (Copyright, 1804, by D. Appleton Oo.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERA, In the y four Aes at land, Ayrault. Heat ‘and Hiore, the’ vlancte nan alrahip. the Calkalp, pr rth tro Tange animal lied by @ new fo be ya ofee ind creatures and rytesaue falryiand. fiend embark of Heaching @ lake, they build tt As they do eo mammoth charges thi |e en, ye the lake, ay, fire Lag] tf eee Tt nl me ther Hod'“the mammabe migity body Lterally tiashed to pieces by some mysterious foe, T! sot yao ore, motater vende Iittle fater tind It slashed to. pleowe as, wen the mas moth. ereature that, hag | Matton is eine teeters Ser CHAPTER XVIII. (Continued. The Spirit’s Firet Visit. ERE,” continued the epirit, “all being immaterial epirits, no physical in- jury can befall any of us; and since no one wants anything that any one else can give, We have no oppor- tunity of doing anything for each other, You see we neither eat nor sleep. neither can any of us again know phy- sical pain or death, nor can we comfort one another, for every one knows the truth about himaelf and every one else, and we read one anothers thoughts as an open boo! ‘Do tell m were able to answer my thoi ‘I see the vibrations of the grey mat- ter of your brain as plainly as tne movem@dnts of your lips; im fact, 1 jsee the thoughts in the embryonte state taking shape. When their moi 66 was ready they ant Jown, Ayrault placing the spirit on his | right, with Cortlandt on hie left, and having Bourwarden opposite. On tls Joccasion their chef nad given them a particularly good dinner, but the spirit | took only @ alice of meat and « glass jor claret. | “Won't you tell us the story of your 1012, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World) ur la A T tit Need suc! a beautiful wife as I havi Copyright, 1012, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World), os” Ole Avrenit to the perl: 8m : alge i : 4 J | your ce al ‘death? “Oh look? See the lovely carvin PROMINENT saleswoman of) takes as an everyday course of events RUDOLF VIRCHOW, Father of Modern Pathology. hey Gale basi tekomokes. lattes w ait have that. It will come 80 if : many years experience claims] Yet later, when the shopper comes back | N the Mth of October, 191, there} work the title of Father of Modern | to us." . Nandy to carve up the things T will cook holdin’ him down in th packin’ | that the present problems of the|to PURCHASE, instead of looking up O was held a public celebration in| Pathology, bs he showed that all] ‘I was a bishop in one of the At- n the chafing dish. And now for the] room and he's ravin' about ‘lovey-dovey’ saleswoman are|the woman who has spent the tme Berlin, Germany, in honor of the} the diseases of the body are accom replied the spirit, grave- Gining room! set. What have you jn dine} and ‘a settee for two’ and somethin’ AeA the} With her and to whom the CREDIT is elghtieth birthday] panied by the disease and destructl nd died shortly before the civil ing room sets about ‘a chafing dish carving knife for SAUOARNS s“|due for the sale, sho buys (probably of Rudolf Virch-lof the cells from which the different | “4! People came from other cities to ‘The clerk showed them everyting, but! ownest own,’ whatever that 1s!” woman shopper! without thinking) from the first sales: ow. All rope] organs and tissues of the body are| "ear MY sermons, and the biographical —. how to buy. She| wo, ain dal y bes : - Sopp 5 writers have 1 my memory by -. woman she meets. united on this day|made, From the day that he announced | saying that I wae a great man. 1 was jell Perhaps you and I have not given to pay him hom-(his new theory, the scence of path-|contemporancous with Daniel Webster To be frank,| this matter very much consideration, age, The whole! ology has grown by leaps and bounds| and Henry Clay Shortly after I she is becoming al-) Ws look on the department store with world ned to bel until now pathology, with ite stater| reached threescore and ten, accord most impossible, If] its army of workers as boing in the anxious to honer| science bacterlology, forma the basis cording to earthly years, T caught what HE tunic dress is we saleswomen| Vernacular “on the Job’ just for OUR) this great man, of medical ae Just as phystol- ; conal ad only sight cold, for I one! of the: nem, would take her se-|#peclal benefit and pleasure; whtch of Helentista fromlogy tx the actence of the living ant. | had always had good health, but | est and prettiest Haials 4 not [course RUB in the mal different parts of|imal in a state of health, Ko In pathology | {Ave PReuinoula. My friends, chi din thes eta Outae 0 rt not | 6"! a ac ’ i ; | and grandchildren came to see n \ 5! 1 t the funny} Certainly, the saleswornan tx there to the world came In] the # which t the processes | a4) weemed going Well, wh vithout Ree te eT nae 0 ntkeny YT aerve whether you buy or not. And person to congrate]of disease, This science wag founded | Warnin ned wolne Fell, whens without tv ertect= de of things 1 ¥ nits arning, ™ ¢ old . ly simple. The tunte Would certainly be |8@ has no quarrel with you if you do ulate him and sel-| by Rudolf Virchow lout a few hours to It I could scare itself 1s made in only bai for us, And |NOT buy, should you not be satinited to entifle bodies from] qrudolf Virchow was born in ve my cars; and though, as a two pieces, with the f it were not for do #0, But the potnt ts made that the all over the work many tn 1821, Ils fath as a farmer hman, | had ministered to other sleoves stitched to the] 1. 9.) nh with her felvies Teckless or frivolous buyer who thinks | sent delegations to show the respect tin @ ttle village, and there the boy had always tried to lead a go armholes, and the| the frivolous woman with her folbles Ooi oe NUMBER ONE” in tue|in which they held him and his work. attended the common school, At the| Hf. 1 Was greatly shocked. 1 sudde shoulder and sleeve) and fancles and the expense she incurs | aneaction is une ot fhe ch causes |The King of It sent Virchow, a8 «! carly age of enteen he finished hia LY remembered all the things I intend edges are ‘buttoned |in her way of buying, the merchant | Ue 'rArtin te une of fle chief cause epcacunl Ghana: Aik Bee. BOF Hig \ to do, and the old saying, ‘Hal {nto place. The ribbon} would be able and glad to pay more to} ta : asp 4a aa id CORSE DAneor Pe ttn Jetudies at the “gyi and Was paved with good Intentions,’ crossed that 16 100F%66| the salespeople cf all departments would seem is a chance for charity! tralt moun upon a gold medallion. |sent to Berlin to study medicine, In 182, my mind very forcibly. In less than through a casing to! nis woman, who sells over $100,090/ tat should begin at home And Kaiser Wilhelm IT, of MY |he was graduated as vetor from the an hour L saw the physiclan was right; draw up the fulness fh ae a ae | ALM s COD RATION NOW |p nted him with the Grand Medal for| University of Berlin and I grew weaker and my pulse fluttered, at the waist line) Worth of women’s clothes @ year, B0e8) AND nHIN 18 SHBD BY THE | Selene pointed to be assistant # but my mind remained clear, I prayed makes a very pretty}On to olte many actu nnees | BEST OF SALBSWOMEN. Vudoit Virchow had gained by his|@narite He Lo Th pli to my Creator with all my soul, 'O. feature. The six gored | Where = wom buyers: day | rn - © om e, > > | gun his career ana teacher and writer SPare mo a iittle, that f may recove skirt is made with | ‘THOUGHTLESSLY add burdens to ihe. - - ————— - } sdical by 7 my strength, before I go hence and be Pialts at the ‘eo {| Saleswoman, The woman who comes in (Paani ta cee: Aga (Per noe seen!’ As if for an anawer, ox plait in the front) wise tg look.” who takes up time n he was ed by the Gov- the thought crossed my rain, ‘Set thing and one in the back. | ernment. to an outbreak of |¢ Mee Aac tar ion att an oa These plaites are| 4nd has no intention of buying, is only house tm order, for thou not love, eS tathe ealon: typhus fever {n one of the provinces of Wut die. {then called my children and pressed so flat that|@ SMALL issue, accor the straight, narrow| woman, as 1 to the woman effect ts maintained, | who buys on credit or the woman who but nevertheless they nay things sent home on-approval and allow free movement. | His Share. tie worked f RICK The model Is a good |eturned again quite as a matter of me, at ae ye TAG Sell n= a for every pretty | Course im! 8 ew aks aon ful Ae summer material, but| “Perhaps the average woman dovsn't F wr @ fdlow ma Vim ab q Well, that a saleswoman’s sales vnow s dress is made of are lue linen shembray: counted up and mark her worth to the scalloped with white. | house,” says the woman I have just| | Te the opening all the | ay “So that everything which | way down the sleeves i ‘ is not liked) they can vack, in Uke manner, is deducted ‘ B be stitched for @ part | from her sales, It happens then, after | Ce aid be + pizo | "H@ has spent much time and energy in . the dress will require {tying to PLEASE the custo: the yards of material sale Is not made to her credit she yanis 36 or 3% | LOsES thereby.” urde 44 inches wide, |“ bagahe My “varda of | She also points out the fuct (and takes . ‘and 3 yards | side with the merchant) that the ONLY | aren Won of edging to make a8 | WAY of estimating @ saleswoman's | ,,, a | oe Patiern No. 7 work is in the summing up of her) « | r 3 cut in sizes 10,12 and| REAL sales and that, after all, te eae The One Landmark. ; 14 yoars of age. merchant 18 the BEST PRIEND of the; ; tte Lyrae M AY met Kin the stzeet, | They hed ‘Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION ECLENT saleswomnan, Wat do you Know laut! machiner; 1-7 | awh Gh Sasiatmat Mow BUREAU, Donald Bullding, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppo- ret her sales INCREASE, her | Ihe ‘ | Alar tual, salutation with « te uite Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, $) Worth goes up; and with it her salary, | On oe “ sald Emily, who wae Oviain {New York, or sent by mail on receipt of ten cents in coin or}) ‘Then again, many times, after div: | Real Optimism. aren't ern’ me. for stamps for each pattern ordered, plAying @ lot of goods and trying to lowing story wae told Attorney ‘ mw me 6S oney, i ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always specify}! Please a customer, which Is of course Hoary W. Huttmen at & recent Germania |aouan't dreadful 1th Patterns. $ size wanted. Add two cents for letter postage if ine hurry, her BUSINESS, the customer leaves to bald Maggy "Au of us pradably here different ideas regard: | “1 eecoguise@ your Donnet,"'—Popular Maganine, look Where; Which the saleswoman| \Germany. In that same year, on a count of hie affiitations with the radical political element in hig country, he was Jobliged to leave Berlin and to go to | Wurgburg, where he continued to teach |the sclence of pathology at the medical | college there. Here he remained until 18%, when he was recalled to Berlin to become p [tensor of pathology. From that time his Mfe and work spelled a continued | success, He was a great scholar not He ts regarded of anthropol- als with the man from to the nes present |} wh n Dum entifle Iabors he a ) fevote to the political fe ¢f an try. He was for many years & member jot the German Relehatag and under his administration of the sanitation of the elty erlin becan one of the most h thful cities {n the world. In 19M Dr. Virchow dled at the age of eleh after having made many very valuable contributions to human knowledge. Haposition of su nd my prop- personal effects as were not by my W§l. I also gave to that my experience had shown me he or she needed, = Thon came another wave of remorse and re- xret, and 1 an intense longing to pray; but « with the thought of sing and neglected duties came also (iw of thd hon ot efforta I had niade to obey my conscience, and these Uke rifts of sunshine during a ‘These thoughts, and the blesset of T had #0 often n the churches of my doc Indeseribable comfort memory storm, nines hed and me from the depths of blanit de- an nally my Dreathing became la- wrod, | had sharp spasme of pain and my pulse almost stopped, T felt that L was dying, and my sight grew dim. ‘Phe crisis and @imax of Ife were at Sand. ‘Ob! T cought, with the philos- rphera and sages, ‘ia It to this end T rave lived? The flower appears, briefly vom# amid troublous toll, and ts gone; body returns to tte primordial dust, my works are buried In oblivion. © paths of life and glory lead but to ie rave.* “My soul was filled with confteting thourhts, and for a moment even my faith seemed at a low ebb, I could By C. M. Payne. | MER. A Journey in Other Worlds A Story of Four Explorers’ Startling Adbentares Among the Planets. y bev and I experienced an indescri! witie, I TELL You FoR Tee LAST Time T want THOSE BOYS To TANE HER T3uet DOG Home An’ WeeP ir THare rape Jacob Astor Trastees of the Astor Estate). hear my chiliren’s stifled sobs, and thought of parting trom them gave of parting them the bitterest wrench. With my nectne breath I gasped, That mercy I showed others, that show Thou me.’ The darkened room grew darker; after that I died. In sleep T seemed to dream. All about were rofined and heav flowers, while the most delightful sounds and perfume filled the afr. Gradually the vision became more ling of peace and repose. I passed through flekis and scenes I had nevér seen before, while every place was filled with an all-pervading Ment. ‘Bometimes I seemed to be miles tn air; countiess sune and their planet: shone and Gassied my eyes, wh! Dird-of-paradise was as Py or free ast. Graduatly it came to me that*I was awake, and that {t was no dream. Then I remembered my last moments, and perceived that I had died. Death had brought freedom, my work in the flesh was ended, I was indeed alive. “© Death, where ts thy sting? O Grave, where is thy victory? In my @y- tng moments I had forgotten what I had eo often preached—Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened ex- copt It die’ In a moment my life Inv before me like @ valley or an oven page. AW along its pathe and waysider I saw the ttle seeda of word and deed that T Nad sown extending and bearing fruit forever for good or evil. “T then saw things as they were, ap! realized the faultiness of my former con- clusions, Dased as they had been on the incomplete knowledge obtained throw embryonte senses. I also saw the Divit purpore tn It the design in a plece of tapestry, whereas before I had seen but the wrong aide. It is not till we have lost the life In the flesh that we realize its dignity and value, for every hour gives us opportunities of helping or elevating some human being—it may be ourselves—of doing something in His cloned, and we can do nothing further ourselves to alter our status for eternity, however much we may wish to. It fs on this account, and not merely to save you from death, which tn {tself ts noth. ing, that I now tell you to run to the Callisto, seal the doors hermetically, and me not forth till a sudden rush of alr that you will see on the trees has passed, A gust in which even birds drop dead, if they are unahle to escape. will be here when you reach safety. Do not detav to take this food. and eat none of it asked Ayr- “You must not ault, grasning his hand leave us till we know how we can see you again.” “Think hard and steadfastly of me, you three,” replied the sprit, “If yo want me T shall feel your thought; #aying which, he vanished before their eves, and the three friends ran to the Callisto, CHAPTER XIX. Doubts and Philosophy. 1 reaching it they climbed the ladder leading to the second- story opening, and, entering this, they closed the de screwing !t tightly In piaee. , Ww, what changes gust will effe “He made no strictures on our senses, such as they are,” sald Bearwarden, “but tmplted that evolution would be carried much further in us, from: which I sup= pose we may infer that !t has not yet gone far,I wish we had recorked those brandy peaches, for now they will be fled with poisonous germs, I wonder if our shady friend could not tell us of an antiseptic with whigh they might bo ted? ‘Those fellows.” thought Ayrault, wha had climbed to the dome, from which he had an extended view, “would jeer at am angel, while the deference they showed the spirit seems, ual, to have been merely supertie!: “Let us note," sald Cortlandt, “that the spirit thermometer outside has fallen eoveral degrees since we entered, thouth, from the time taken, I should not sav that the sudden change would be oue of temperatute Just then they saw a number of birds, which had been resting ina el opi trees, take fight suddenly; but they foil to the ground before they had risen far, and were dashed to pieces, In another ent the trees began to bend and before the storm; and bed 1 the color of the leaves turned reen and purple to orange aad red, The wind blew off many of these, and they were carried along by the guatea or flattened to the id, which soon strewn with them. It was @ > cal autumnal scene. Presently the shifted, and this wae followed by a od shower of rain, ‘ (To Be Continued) sald Cortlandt, “* we cas if any, this wonderful \

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