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é Winan.. Sve See saiorld. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, 6 i1y Except Sunday by the Preas Publishing Company. Nos, 63 to Bublished Daily Except Be tek How, New York RALPH PULITZ: J, ANGUS SITAW, JOSEPH PULITZER, J Fntered at the Post-OMco at New York ay Becond-Class Matter. @ubscription Rates to The Evening|¥or England and the Continent’ and AM Countries tn the International Portal Union. . President, 63 Park Row, T 68 ae, Row. rk Row. World for the United States and Canada. $8.80] One Year. .80|/One Month VINDICATED. HE Democratic party in convention has nominated Gov. Wood- I row Wilson of New Jersey for President of the United States. The Democratic party, despite tempters and wheedlers and disrupters and bullies, has won through. The Democratic party has chosen a candidate who has walked neither with rich traffickers in power and privilege nor with noisy demagogues and inciters of passion. The Democratic party has chosen a candidate who combines with the calm, practical good sense of the sane, active American the dignity and intellectual resource of the scholar. The Democratic party has glorified itself in the eyes of its friends, It has made itself formidable unto its foes. The Democratic party stands vindicated. A A great airship at Atlantic City sailed proudly into the morning sunlight.” Her builder trusted her to dare the width of the ocean, One burning ray, a flash, a roar, and five men plunged with her to death in the sea! Only a few hours earlier a brave young woman at the very height of her fame and daring was finishing a superb flight in a monoplane. A puff of wind—and she and her passenger went hurtling down a thousand feet to lie crushed, disfigured, dead in the mud of Boston harbor. Forty-eight of these brave flying folk dead already this year! One hundred and fifty-nine killed since the death of Lieut. Selfridge in 1908! AJl honor to their courage. Every year more and more press forward. Who would dare to predict the terrible toll the air will yet take of man before, if ever, she lets him travel her paths in relative safety? 4% showing theatre managers and audiences how easy it is to have music without an orchestra. From the musicians’ point of view the strike was a short-sighted move. With the astonishing development of self-playing pianos and in- struments that imitate a complete orchestra these men might have known managers would seek some such substitute. The novelty would be sure to please the audience. Whereupon the manager, re- joicing at the saving of money and space, would henceforth snap his fingers at fiddles and clarinets. Of course at present mechanical instruments only serve for pieces thet need little or no music, for some accompaniments and for music between the acts. But who knows how soon somebody may invent a mechanical orchestra with which one man can play a whole light opera score? Conductor Nikisch and the London Symphony Orchestra gave aconcert at Queen’s Hall the other day with a mechanically played piano. The programme included difficult piano music. ‘The result was beyond all expectations. And this under the auspices of one of the greatest and most thorough musicians! No, the fiddlers’ strike was far from wise, It’s always a mistaire to let folks see how dispensable we really are. \ { WHO receives his investiture from the Emperor becomes ” wrote the Chinese sage Mencius. ‘He who re- —___-++ 6 H a Prince,” ceives it from a Prinee becomes a Lord; he who receives it from the common people becomes the Emperor.” — ++ AGAINST THE BARS. GAIN Nature points a scornful finger at the presumption of man and straightway his boasted new machines and play- things crample him into nothingness WHO'S INDISPENSABLE? HE theatre orchestra strike seems to have resulted mainly in SS ee ET folks fond of analogies, parables and such seize upon stories from Philadelphia that the famous Liberty Bell has lately started to crack and crumble some more and is getting ready to go to pieces: So is it with the institutions of free government; after a while they develop flaws and fissures and have to be recast, ete., ete.! In spite of the reports we guess the Bell is all right for a while Probably the fact is that after all these queer newfangled noises from Chicago and Baltimore, the old pealer is just busting to let out a ring of the old sort! O AFTER we hollered good and loud our tight fisted old Uncle doled out a measly $75,000,000 to keep us going until the end of the month! We hope the neighbors had their windows shut. it appears from the latest —— A testimony of those who have had ‘em and know, that they S TO the true source of “affinitie are sent by the Almighty—generally “as a prize for a suffering and miserable past.” ee VEER things, words, sitting in camera! oo A court protects a girl from publicity by Letters From the People| seoeenennmnannnannnnnaeny Pipe or C To the Editor of The Will some m or other expert reader advise me if pipe smoking t# 48] the injurfods to the health as cigarett, Thie ought to interest other readers, Ww. D. A Stutterer's Plaint, To the Editor of The Evening Worl Could any one with experience advise! finest things that hi me, a8 to some simple way in which 1| city, ean cure myself of stuttering? When I. brass band has Geen done away wii) talk to myself I epeas as welljas any aK rette? I always stutter fo in Central Park, or of The Evening World Seeing a protest BG the protest, one, but when I am #peaking to others ‘ainat the muste tn Central Park, I wish to way that I (and am sure many others) do not agree with | Tho installation of orches- | trai musto in Centra! Park {8 one of the| deen done in this We can be thankful that the old | Can You Beat It? 3% (-2eeer) 3 By Maurice Ketten | Ho CHANCE For You Boys Tar OININ: WEE Rat | — Ueehetote } ets "The Evening World Daily Magazine, 1 DON T Cas IF | NEVER SLEEP. 1 DION'T COME HERE To SLEEP PT OONT CARE IF INEVER EAT,| DiON'T COME HERE Nae To EAT Don'T CARE Ii Bore, HERE To Wednesday, July 3, i] VOON'T CARE IF | (NEVER WASH | DIDN'T COME HERE To WASH | i IF 140 I DIDN'T Come SAVE Money Pre Publishing Co, Copyright, 1912, by Th (Phe New York World), with che the told Mrs, Jarr, when, visitor, the famtly had seated 66 > how is everybody at Hay | A Corners, Uncle Henry?" asked er-hearted I Jest can’t stand to hear I took a chance to ask the doctor, casual- lke so he couldn't charge me fer It, one day I met him, what he thougat Was the matter with I and he said he thought a change would do her good, So I made up my mind to give her one, even if car fare does cost mol hard times. I hops @he don’ being separated from ‘s good!” erted Mra. Jarr. 1s Aunt Hetty going?” Rr re Pot thet el fel eka kalied The Jarrs Learn Vital Tidings Of Life Amid the Tall Timbers. | HOE 90 0 9 OE EE “SHE hain't going nowhere,” explained Unele Henry, “but I thought my coming to New York and not being around would be a change for her, and so I'm here. I belteve with Charley Stivers who was talking about it at the ba! the Eagle Hotel the other day, that home Is woman's proper spear. Charley Stivers has drunk up his saddle-and- barn hop, but he’s got good hard, common sense on them matters. wimmen staid at home and minded their own affal ays Charley, ‘the country would be better off’,”* solves at supper. ‘You've hardly ua a. thing." “They hain't anything new much," sald Uncle Henry, “ ‘cept that folks Hay Corners is livin’ #0 extravagantly that I'm feard we're all rushin’ to de- struction, Hascombe has put in a bat tw and T hear as how the family goes fn ewimmin' in it every day. Means extry gasolene for the engine that pumps thelr tank, and extry Kaso- lene only means more of people's hare earned money in the pockets of that John W. Rookefeller, That's the second ‘ath room in Hay Corners, there bein allowed to use that one because Mra neat around the hotel, takes a great pride in showing it to visitors, and sho Saye using St would only aplle the bright metal fixings if she let anybody swim unt Hetty is not feeting very well, |you say?” asked Mrs. Jarr, to change the subject “he's complafnin’ all the time," re. plied Uncle ‘And I'm that Still Bright. Henry you referred to your Congrossman as a ‘Shining Light?” “We used to. Now we just call him a ‘Danger Signal.'” one at the Eagle Hotel; but nobody is) Ed Smith, who likes to keep everything | Epoch Copyright PARACELSUS, the “Reform- | er” of Medicine. M The those doctors days superstition, of anatomy physiology. 0° the the the chine whe in sound workings o' it wa: the slightes of wha’ not notions happened to It In disease. They did not have even the remotest f the existence of germs and how are in bringing about then known iden Instrumenta! the | Chemistry was jonty ay alchemy, and its great object | was the discovery of how to make gold. All the medicine known to the 4 Was what | dixoase, physician Hippocrates, who Mved 00 years before Christ, and from Galen, who live and taught in the ond century of our own era. Nothing ne Was added to medical sctence since the} days of these men, Dogma and super | jstition reigned supreme in medicine as {wet as in religion. Such the advancement of the great art and {s medicine, and reform ine nen A great medical reformer in the person of Paracelsus, {him the world ts indebted for down the old method min methods of treatment | Paracelsus (whose real name wa IN MEDICINE By J. A. Hasth, M. D. 112, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World) PDICAL selence during the mid- dle ages Was largely @ mass of of had no real knowledge) for the purpose of completing his med- They | aid not understand | structure or human = ma- a healthy, condition, and, therefore, had ame down from the Greek was To breaking and for directing | existing in the medical profession he sof men to the search for the| made for himself very many enemios auses of disease and for rational) cophrastus Bombast Von Hohenheim)! in 1641 Makers village in Switzerland. His father was @ physician and his mother was the superintendent of a small hospital. Very Uttle is known of his boyhood, except that he was educated by his own father in medicine as well as in other branches of learning. At th ixteen went to Basel to enter the university "teal stud! In a short time he mad up his mind that the university teachers had nothing to teach that was worth while for him to learn, Ho left oollege, therefore, and under- took to educate himself by travel and observation, He travelled for many years. He ts sald to have visited all the countries of Burope and to have gono as far India and beyond, Wherever he came his mind dwelt on the one object of learning how to cure Aisease. In the course of his wanderings and observations he made many valu- able discoveries for the sctence of medicine, He discovered the value of mercury in treating blood diseases. This last discovery alone entitled him to everlasting fame. The remedy has stood the test of over four centurtes and |waved millions from misery and death. In 1627, upon his return from wanderings, Paracelsus was appointed ‘\town physician at Basel, Switserland | and lecturer of medicine at the unive “\ity, In a short time his skill and mar. vellous cures made him famous, Backed by his success and prestige he began to f it t \ state of affalrs was bad for attack with sarcasm, force and veha- mence the old methods then tn vogu: Mo was the pure-drug man of his da: and exposed the frauds of the quack medicines of the times. By these denunciations of abuses and soon found it the city of Basel menced to travel expedient to leave Once again he com: His Journeys ended In that year he died—it ts sald was born in the year 1490, in @ Uttle at the hands of his enemies, SAIAA ALAA AAA | KKK KK EK EK CE EES oe “There's one thing I've always wanted to ask you, Uncle Henry,” sald Mr. Jarr, pausing in his attack on the viands, “but it's rather persona! and, | naturally, I feel some hesitation about mentioning it." “Fire away," replied Uncle Henry, "So long as T git my three square meals @ day when I'm visitin’ I hain't thin skinned over what's said to me. ‘The her photographs for and will be pleased to answer all proper questions,’ as the lecturer says of the fat woman at the clrous side- | show “Well,” sald Mr. Jarr, regarding Uncle | Henry's wagging chin beard with much | interest, “do you sleep with your whisk | ers outside or inside the bedclothe: | | ‘It all depends whether {t's summer or winter,” answered Uncle Henry, passing his plate for another helping. | “Do you eat watermelon with « knife, ‘too, asked Mr. Jarr, continuing his | quest for inside information as Uncte Henry briskly plied the object in ques- tion. | "Do you think I'd eat watermelon with la fork and be danger of sticking | |holes in my face? asked Uncle Henry. | "What's to pervent @ man eating water- melon with his knife “If he isn't careful the watermeion | will roll off the blade,” suggested Mr, Jarr. “Huh!” snorted Uncle Henry. ‘What | “Kin we take Unoli moving pictures, Maw’ Jarr (not that he loved the visitor so much, but because he loved the movies |more). “There's w film called | ‘Pedro's Pard’ at the Fairyland Nickel- | odeor “I ike Funny Bunny best. He makes) such faces," sald little Miss Jarr, “Don't you, Uncle Henry?” | “T think It's a waste of money going to them moving pictures," remarked | the visitor, “But, seeing as your pa- rents 1s bound to pay for my taking you, why, T'll give in about it.” Mr, Jarr, possibly thinking {t would | be cheaper to pay for Uncle Henry's} taking the children to the moving ple- tures rather than to conduct him to! Gus's, handed the visitor a quart: | Uncle Henry produced a dime in change, remarking that he asked noth- ing off nobody, even though a guest, | “I won't be an imposition on nobody," | added Uncle Henry. ‘Money ts scarce and times ts hard, I see you use but- ter on your table, Clara," he conclud- ed, severely. “T got ten cows, But with butter selling for what It does I {don't feel as I can afford to use tt." | “What's become of Jane Bisbee, the [ciel who worked for Aunt Hetty, and |who was always singing ‘I Dreamt That I Dwelt in Marble Halls?" asked Mrs, Jarr, to cut short the lecture on | dwellin’ in the all aright.! She come up to town and got work i” one of them white-tiled restaurants. visiting relative, | Europe, | cause, in 1-9:1-2 Womenllearthpa : 6 O# Talisbors/aseer Parson reeH Copyright, 1912, by The Breas Publishing Co, (The New York World), —LADY HAMILTON; Nelaon’s “Evil Genius ADY HAMILTON is without exception the coarsest, mobt 4Il- mannered, disagreeable person I ever have met!” ‘ NO. 1. 66 So wrote a court chronicler in the early daye of the eighteenth century; and to prove his assertion he ne many lurid details. Here is a brief description of the woman: She yas tall, lithe, infinitely graceful; with an oval face, big deep-blue eyes, email, shapely hands, and with shimmering goklen-chestnut hair that fell to her feet. ‘Those same feet, by the way, were perhaps the ugilest and biggest in They were the only flaw in her looks wie In 1765, in an English village hut, Amy Lyon was born, Her mother Her father was @ blacksmith. The child grew up Illiterate, was a ecrvant, In fact she never, in all her life, learned to spell or speak correctly, (At the age of twelve she became a nursemaid, At thirteen she was a chamber- maid in the household of a lady of rank from whom she picked up some smattering of good manners. Then, after a term as shopgirl in a :ittle London dry goods store ame a waltrere In a cheap tavern frequented by clever, down-at-heel writers, While she was there a naval ofMficer named Payne fell in love with her. But he was cut out by Str Henry Festherstonhaugh, who in turn was supplanted notorious quack. 4 Amy anked her name to Enma Harted poged res for Graham as Hygela, the goddess of health. durine these # attracted Charles Greville, a “por fell moderately In love with her an@ehe It wast nd great love of her . Romney, to her, Romney was a whils ized her loveliness {n a number of portraits, Ing vier'm and immort Greville's uncle, ol r Willlam Hamilton, British Ambassador to Nafles, heard of the affair and came to «i to remonstrate with his nephew, Ho fell tn love with Emm: fight. The upshot of the matter was that Grevilie, for a large sum of money, gave up all claim te Emma; and Sir Willlam mare ried her. ° Sick with grief at Greville's desertion, Emma stullenly agreed to be Sit William's wife. And henceforth, since love was gone, she lived for powet, She went to the Neapolitan court with her husband, where she became the Queen's most Intimate friend; and soon began to sway international politics to sult-her own whim, At Naples met Horatio Nelson, who was then an obscure naval officer, Ht ts not on record that he then futerested her or she him, But when, few years later, Nelson came back Lady Hamilton was sel as hers was too ard and head to her, ples a naval hero and the {dol of the court, ized with a form of hero-worship for him, Such adoration vt for a man of Nelson's sort to resist, Hoe lost his Neartq+ For a time she was the most sought-after woman in RUrdpe. Even the Prince of Wales (afterward George 1V.) was smitten by her chrarms and devoted the rest of his Ife to her service. Nelson's slavish love forvfady Haiiliton and the length to which {tt drove him are the only blots on the man's wonderful career, When he was struck down in battle at the moment of wetory, his last words were of her. After Nelson's death the world at large turned its back on Lady Hafifittos. She had been a peerless beauty; but, thanks to her love for gorging enormous quantities of food, she was growing fat and unwieldy. She had had @ comforts able fortune. But her passion for gambilng soon left her penniless. The former heartbreaker was now merely a woated, middle-aged, impoverished gtutton. She was cast into prison for debt, and remalned there a year. Then she mot free and fled to France to dodge her creditors. Poor, neglected, half-torgotter she @led in 1815 at a Calais lodging house that was almost as squ as hovel in which she had been born. : Like nearly all of history's ignoble heartbreakers, Lady Hamilton ha@ en- Joyed her hour of dazzling, unworthy triumph, and at,last had deen bditterty punished. She who had ruled courts died in misery, the poverty of her fast days made more bitter by the fact she could no ‘onger afford tc eat @ whole turkey at one meal. 7A POCKET VCLOPEDIA. 186—Why on a calm day can sounds be heard at a greater distance on sea than on land? — i 1S7—Why is the vegetation on a river bank more lururiant than tn-an open field? 188—Why is it casier to swim in salt water than in fresh? 139—When liquid is poured from a bottle what causes the gurgliny sound? 190—Why is green fruit hard and ripe fruit soft? EPLIES to these questions will be printed Friddy. to Monday's queries: 181—(Why does a fresh egg feel colder to the tongue at the thick end than does a stale egg?)—The thick end of a fresh egg contain: more white and air than does that of a stale egg. The white of an egy {8 a better “conductor” than ts air, So the heat of the tongue is drawn off More rapidly and the egg will feel colder to the tongue. 182—(How high above earth are the clouds?)—On a very clear day the clouds are often four or five miles above earth, But their average height from tht ground 1s from one to two miles, 183—(W" it dangerous to sit near an open fire ins. thunderstorm?)—Be ition to the peril from the draught, the heated "air and soot nn strong conductors of lightning. . 18+—(Why does rain usually follow a hot spell?)—In hot weather the molstu of the earth is continuously drawn up into the air, When the air can no longe hold {t this moisture comes down again tn the form of rain, 18—(Why does green wood, when burning, snap less than dry wood?)—[b pores are full of sap and can thus hold very little alr, Snapping 1s caused by tht effort of the imprisoned alr to excape from the burning wood, The May Manton Fashions «= ; Er blouse the fi fashionable thie sea won and this one ii made With straigh edges, so that 1 especially adapted t bordered — mateflala and to flouncingy. al though plain materia can be fintshed.with banding, seal Here are the answers with the chemisett of tucking 16. .ser, charming, but ¢! obs i & coming need ‘fo blouses of a difterens sort and the sugges tion made in the bac! view 1s equall¥ desir able, for long sleeve are promised) in. in creasing numbe cool are lapped onto’ tit centre portions nj the sleeve stitched to the arm The clom: yy the blouse. wil require 3% yards o bordered materia}, U inches wide yards of p if rds 36 or 14-yard 44 inches widg with 4 yard 18 inches wid Tor the centre, bor Pattern No. 7500—Surplice Blouse, 34 to 42 Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION] | BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 Weet Thirty-second street i , comer Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street,! nt ®y mail on receipt of tem cents in este wr! stampa for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT—Write your addreas plainly and always specify) we wanted, Add two cents for letter postage if in e hurry,