The evening world. Newspaper, July 20, 1912, Page 8

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ea et _ @pce to interfere. Your words _The E Cte BAS card. ESTABLISHMD BY JOFEPR FULITERR ncn t8 10 Puvlishes Daily Exoep by the Press Publishing Company, t BUNA How, New Yor { President, ¢8 Park Row. ‘RALPH PUL J. none SHAW, Treas Pe JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr., Secretary, ‘ow York @econd-Class Mat mt 4 and the Continent Fort Counrien in the International Portal Union. 88.80] One Year. 0 One Month... VOLUME 53. A PAINFUL INCONGRUITY. | ICHARD HUNT'S masterpiece, the Lenox Library, will soon be a pile of old stones for the first bidder to build into cellar walls or dump into a hole, as he sees fit. | The controversy that led Mr. Frick to withdraw his offer to re- erect the structure in Central Park settled the fate of the buil ‘once and for all. No champion has been forthcoming. The con- tractors who are making ready the site for the millionnire’s new resi- dence rejoice because now they can knock the library to pieces and han! it away in twenty-eight days instead of the three months re- quired if they must number the stones and keep them intact. So, goodby forever to one of New York's finest buildings. | Nobody seems to have thought of the beautiful memorial to the @ead architect which stands on the other side of Fifth avenue, just cpposite his spurned masterpiece. That memorial was fittingly placed where Richard Hunt’s bust might forever face his greatest wor! The city has allowed his greatest work to go to the rubbish pile. Do not common decency and fitness suggest that the city provide some new resting, place for the memoria aca Or, will New York let the bust of its most famous architect’ re-! main to gare sorrowfully across the street at the palace of a Pitis-! burgh coke burner? T great need is lime. When we eat boiled eggs and leave the shells we make a big mistake, We should eat the shells. The lime therein increases strength and vitality, fights off germs, strengthens the heart, cures inflammations, sets broken legs, nourishes the brain and promotes happiness, ambition and personal charm. More yet. According to these learned doctors lime is the anti- ote for race suicide. Phey have proved it by experiments: Fight white mice on a lime diet produced fifty-three mouselets, while eight others on ordinary fare were favored with but nine offspring. It is well known that hens cease laying when there is no lime in their feed, etc., etc. ————<4¢ 2 MORE ADVICE. WO distinguished German scientists tell us that modern man’s A new cure-all, then: Three times a day a half-teaspoonful of chloride of lime dissolved in water. ‘The effect is wonderful. It witl prolong a man’s life to the last moment. $= HAS IT COME TO THIS? | UST citizens of New York from their private pockets hiro an outside detective force to hunt down a gang of mur-| derers because the oity police hang back \ trusted? The tale of what the police have left undone since the| shooting of Rosenthal in the early morning hours of last Tuesday | lends a strange air of reluctance to tho little they have done, = Call in an expert. Admit that honest men do not know on which side of the law/the police are workin=! Could disgrace ho deeper? ———— 4 To the Editor of The Evening World: Tam acquainted with a handsome young man who claims that he cannot think, and for that reason cannot hold @ position or aupport himself. Will some reader who knows kindly advise me what to do for him? J. P. BROWN, This letter reveals a situation so tense that The Evening World ftestens to give it prominence in the hope that some experienced teader may come to the rescue with the right advice. Meanwhile we eve going to figure on it ourselves, _———4+- ECRETARY BISHOP, of the Isthmian Canal Commission, who was here through the hot spell, has sailed back for Colon “io ecape the heat’! sep one vening a | to drop in to see us after dinner.” World CuRLTwem We TIGHT. HE HAS Such BeAuTIEUL and cannot be! = Copyrighi, 1912, by Tue Pies Pudilaning Oo, | wes he? New York World) MEL Jack Mr. Jarr whe the other evening. going “Why dicn't you bring him home with Pread t h reer. asked Mrs. Jarr. “That's always) ad news for those who live and hustle all summer in this | tasks mactien rou! Any. old: tramp 01 tewn! If folks from the tropics get used up by a little warm weathor| to “tne ‘hou without iting. me now fike that, then we local residents are some stickers, We always took|1 pomething extra for, Sinner. | Ht for granted that living near the Equator must be t ably too much for us, but shucks, @nybody on earth! In these so-called hot countries they knock off work in the middle | of the day and take a nap until 4 in the afternoon, Nothing like it looks ns if we could stand it with tying and prob-| 7 unexpect gon Mr any in then you never esting person think of you kick so when T do bring a company to dt mam Bee the lady cut him but Jarr; ort. ; ‘i ‘I Just told you the kind of company that for us. Champion hot-weather workers of the world—that’s 1 oblected to. But Jack Silver ts dif- what we are! ferent. Of all your friends he ts the os only one that ever asks us to have a % A t his expense. And yet hy PERHAPS “Bull Mice” is the much Sought plural! on sgem to care the least fo: i “Geewhiiikens! I'm the original : - vi bad, the Married Man!" retorted Ms, | “Bomb for Alfonso’s Aunt.” Jarr. ! Tribune headiine. thing to please you, and, well, Located at last! ‘ow, T beg oftyou, don't come home | [Eetters From the People A Drug W ad cour to help ft the burden from | Fo the Editor of The Evening World: the brute, If one ts inspired many Twish the city would wage war onjothors must be; and one Nttle word occasionally, in such @ paper as yours, is of great value in a cai whic must appeal to all who are just and humane, = MRS. ©, Think Dewnto ‘To the kaitor of The Ly the sellers of that murderous drug, co- caine, which has cutsed the death of so This drug can be bought too There seems to be no let up in ale of it, which offers a big prof. The sale of this terrible polson should @ World: be stopped. 8. W. | Thave noticed and so have a whole lot of other people that we find ‘ mor Praises Ed! , courtesy and Willingness jn clerks : To the Raltor of ‘The Rvening Wartd: uptown stores (above Canal street) than I wish to express my in clerks who worl in the stores | and approval of the sentiments ex-| downtown busin: @ Ac Ing ae ee Pressed by you in # recent editorial) know why unless because m: i m cruelty to animals over which was] downtown stores cater to ihe trade ot Printed “Don't 2nd the Troubl {men rather than to the trade of women, | pete your werds, “no inconvenience! do not say, ether, that the rudences, | oF natural ebrinking from publicity | ourtness, &c., of downtown clerks ts unt. | should deter one from turning the of-| Vere! Or even general, But 1 do say fonder over to the law.” Many cases iit iy frequent; tur too frequent, What of cruelty are seen by men and women | do others think about this? §. SMITE ‘who feel @ keen sympathy, but also fee) tnetr inability to help the poor euimals—only by calling attention of Passersvy who seem to feel a reluct- ine @piring ond I shall hereafter fee) more admiration | walk on the side near- est the curb oF between the two ladies? oF, ne | ANA Start a quarrel with me when Mr. The Millennium, Daily ‘Magazine. y RELY HAS SWELL HAIR £3 A SHAME WASTE SucH BEAUTIFUL HAIR ON A MAN I know, but h World that I should want to come to this ittle house and see what I have > endure at your hands. No, he thinks married people are happy"— “That's because he's a bachelor,” mur- a bd A BUSINESS man wiitos ing the ‘Talks with Liv it occurs to me that one of the subjects that 1s alive as any other 1s this matter of infringing on & person's time, And I bellove that this is more the \case with woman than man, She wil come into the office, take up your time, ask all Kinds of que: tions, and stray off on some other subjects. A man foes not want to be discourteous by cutting her off short and—there yow arr, “This happens every day. It would seem to me that people, exp My those who are not in business themselves, should realize that busy man's time 4# worth something to him and sliould respect It accordingly, Besites, T have even seen many business women! of conatderable experience who hav in the course of commercial commun tion, gone off on a tangent on some subject that has nothing to do with the! case at hand; and many valuable mo- | ments were wasted, Now T am not « ‘grouch,’ but I feel certain that othera | have suffered from this source, and 1! take this method of bringing it the business women," Yes, Mr. Busini Man, some reason for grievance, not think the average woman {8 the transgressor, The real! Dusiness woman realizes that time Is regulated by @ pendulum of monetary value, that brevity 1s not only the soul of wit, but ts the asset of the fit, before you have, Rut I do! BUSINESS in business, And when, on an errand bent, to be! brief {8 her stock tn trade, Tor Ifke the candle, the longer she stands the shorter she grows, and eventually burns herself out in the estimation of the man she {8 dealing with, sing the calendar!” “Why? “I'd have twenty-five -Gaturdays to every Monday, While @ pleasant word tn the midst of a worklay period, aslée from the | BRIGHTED ano! @ sordid day, taking up no metiey how succesatus ui eae Saturday, Jul | Love You AND Your, ese Ch WAR | | | PPECEEEEOEOSEE EAE SOSEEEEERSEOO DEES £O000000000000E00 | Mrs. Jarr Sets a Matrimony Trap To Ensnare a Harmless Bachelor: B9GIVSTVISSSTISSS 59S99S5599599998 B5200200000000082 | Jarr. mured Mr. “And he has resolved that he will 1 marry except to make 401 very day of her life’—— t's why he’s never done tt! happy “And th woman “Well, I have no time to stand around abusing poor Jack Bilv enterprise, The Thief Who Steals Your Time By Sophie Irene Loeb, Copyright, 1012. by The Press Pubtishing Co, (The New York W e "1 » », hind nis As Bulwer Lytton says: Time, oh, my friend, is money! Time wasted can n well managed, However, ittle or nothing to do, and hi r conduce to money I think the business man entioned will find that it ts ust no RE- SPONSIBILITY, who !s the real thiet of the workday populace—perhaps un- consclously, foul has with any on: SAME pal ‘Therefor the actual nece: unite: aid: “You cannot sympathize | sly, As wise unless you have felt the not having ‘ been put to ity of continually SAV- ING time, if she encroaches on that of | Others It ts perhaps done thoughtless!y ‘True, Mr. Business M it sents Itself, the stiesman, in fact any ong who has something that, perchance, you want, Is At off from ti ery often the question of yes or no, | ax to the iran: saet moments are LIM- the other not ALWAYS the “women in the Another side of the question ore is the man who ki 14 off, Me te usually the man ‘higher | Would # and forgets that the time of the} *!#ht. Oh, I wish you had let me know an lower down {8 as PRECIOUS to |¢ariter. 1 as to the other, | hus It comes about that the agent, , @*lphia hand, however, Ps putting i, Could .be settled |" almost Immediately, ick, All 1 do know, he 4; f man who could maki If any man could “Maybe #9, maybe so,” replted Mr. | Tarr, “but It's a funny thing that the | type of man tha could make a woman happy t# the me r handy, for the truth that Jack Silver was a chronto bachelor; but Mrs. Jarr and all tne other women of his acquaintance, ms ried and single, hoped yet to see him tnken captive and thoroughly sub- Jugated. “I'll telephone Clara Mudridge-Smith | to come over,” said Mrs. Jarr, “She's) In town getting some clothes ready to go to Narragansett— No, I won't./ what unmarried gir! do I know who ts In town? Cora Hickett? do, She so palpably set r cap for) Jevery single man she meets that Jak Silver gets rervous whenever he sees | he No, she won't | ‘Good gracious! Can't one man have [ife, iberty and pursuit of happiness?" ked Mr. Jarr. . “How can a bachelor be happy?" re- | Pied Mra. Jarr. “Besides, Jack Silver's fot a good Income and a good position. | | He SHOULD be married and giving) {some nice girl ® fine home. Ther |Grace Gribble. She's such a atlly thing, | though! Besides, they have scarlet fever at the \irfhbles, Still I could send our, children over to the Rangtes while| |. Grace was here. Oh, dear tan't tt pro-| voking!” | sqen't what provokin: | Jarr. “Why, the children couldn't stay at | the Rangles till as lat Grace Gribble If there was a single man in T could ha dys to sent a telegram for over from Phila- cous! | }_ "Vain ts the net of the fowler spread | fn the sight of any bird," quoted Mr. | e to time—when very, | Jarr. | “Oh, you shut up! erled Mra. Jar. ne would helleve to hear you talk that all women thought of was to entrap A man will unconclously postpone a! men into marriage! Let,me see, what thing even when he K cision at the time he does it, and w! OW his do- there would have been @ saving for all thing were settled, concerned If oven if 1t were a negatiy the seeker, ‘Thus, in ‘The subw with peop! block your “step lively.” the and this matter of time, | golden rule system is the most efficient, | mused Mr, Jarr, “I never knew any) er than ours, must e commanded to “watch your ste They fatl to recogn! the fact that as thi sare tlement to the ulated now time and trains wait for no man, Consideration is the in the 1 “But do thou love life? Then do not| well-to-do bach for/ that te the stutt Ne Ute to made of." time NEPDLESSLY its bad! squander time, o of lfe-activity | business, may not go amiss and may! own Benjamin Franklin bie clause As our | Birl do I know who 18 in town? ‘The| | silly things! ‘They all rush to the sea-/ | shore or the mountains,» when they! might know summer is the BEST time jin the city! “Phen single men aro lonely | and desperate” } "Gee! You must Ike Jack Silver j other man Interest you so, He must be| perfection in your eyes!"? | | “Perfection!” cried Mrs. Jerr, "t think he is the most selfish, self-satie- | fled, sapheadc 1, small brained, clumay, | stupid man T ever met! What any! woman would marry HIM for I can't imagine! Let me see, what nise girl ts} \tn town that we could ‘phone to come over after supper and meet a charming, ? He likes a jolly| tupid! Can't | girl, doem't as ef seme one?’ Such Is Life! 3% (-s%ti-) 4 By Maurice Ketten | What good would that do? Let me sea, | | ute 20. 1912 mock to and fro, ‘round the corner alone on 9 “That's not half so strang will tle himself to a woman by all the to TIE himself at all. ‘The ‘tied’ feciin feeling.’ * “I wonder why." sighed the Rib, “a after evening for years without seemin; their Interest and loyalty and devotion. | Man. “The tles that bind—and bind and t and the furniture. 10 up and go to bed, think simultaneously, year after year, dog, and Biameso Twin existence they impose on themselves and on one another wh hem yearn for a change and a little freedom of thought and action."* ‘Well, what kind of existence would you HAVE them lead, Mr. Cutting?” | Inquired the Rib coldly, “a separate existence?” mak ‘Oh, I don't know, nm would be loyal a: would allow him complete freedom tn in all the little matters of eating, sald the Mere when a husband te guilty of a deflectios often for love of another woman wife would show the same ences as she does for his razor’ — “Andi€ he would display the same dressing table and her optinto: “Oh—of course! agreed the Bachel: it forever instead of turning into a n “Yes,” agreed the Rib musingly. me moment—just because they love o: during the engagement?" with his coat off dM his feet on the m and os much as he pleases and wearing 1 4 why shouldn't a woman," con| breakfast In bed if sho Ikes and sitting ‘round tn a kimono if she Iker | reading novels and eating chocolates and wearing cu: cried the Mere Man. “Yo Coprright, 1012, by ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), brigade,’ j@ that @ woman who rouldn’t trust a husband New York alone for three months in the summer time. * declared the Rib decisively, in order to get away from her, summer and winter, “But no man ever does,” corrected the Mere Mar “But they don’t seo each other morning after morning,” explained qhe Me-s | tovatty and devotion, but the triviaiitles—the laundry, and the breakfast Bell, and the cai the soap, the daily routine; the awful monotony of having to get fo out and come home, eat, walk, talk, dresi 1 devoted to his wife until the Day of Judgment if she “What? exclaimed the Mere Man tn astonishment, "Why shouldn't.a man go right on eating at cafes when he Ikes, She Suggests a Cure for That “ Tied” Feeling, After Marriage. a punerryenneetyn | 4 nodding toward g the Rib’s ham- remarked the Mere Mai as he gently swul winter evening will trust him all around that @ man bonds of law and heaven apparently Just atten as he can.” “That Is, he doesn't meay comes afterward—along with the ‘trod palr of lovers can seo each other evening iw to get In the least tired or to falter ta and BIND—aren't the tles of love aud and the towels, breathe and that wears love to a frazzie, It's tae Man, “but T DO know that the average his daily habits and entire personal Mb- sleeping, talking, amoking and amusing ‘himself. It's having to do all these little things because you HAVE to, instéad | of because you WANT to, that makes married life seem so long and dreary, And n from the matrimonial bonds It Isn't #9 for love of Iberty— nd a change, If a cred regard for his individual tastes and prefer> respect for her Individual rights and her as he does for her toothbrush,” put in the Rid. lor hastily, “Love's young dream would ightmare of personal discomfort.” “When you come to think of {t, why | SHOULD two people be hungry, or sleepy, or tired, or merry at exactly the ch other? Why shouldn't each go right | on in his or her own sweet accustomed way after tho wedding just as they 418 and opting jantelpiece if ho !kes, and smoking what whatever he pleases’ rt" erted @he Mere Man delighted!y. tinued the Rib, “zo right on having her and papers tf she wants te?” ro talking socialism.’ P ‘What's socialism? inquired the Rib innocently. “The idea that every man should do as he pleases, provided he doesn't inter! fere with the rights of other people.” expiatned the Mere Man, “How perfectly lovely! warded his wife as ‘people, onsense,” retorted the Mer® Men, tears If her lovey dovey went down to wanted hii js cooked on one wh “And the average bridegroom, ished the ate his breakfast all aloney. "Yes," sighed the Mere Man, “they hopes and joys and sorrows, and then “And," mused the Rib softly, “they Rib. “Or tt would be if a man ever re she added thoughtfully, “The average bride would be drowned tn breakfast four minutes ahead of her or jen she preferred hers turned over.” | rejoined the Rib, “would be consumed with | Wrath if his petsy-wetsy wanted to lie in bed and read the newspaper while he marry tn ‘order to share one anot! fpoll it all by Insisting on sharing ; Qnother’s meals and secrets and letters and brushes and grouches.”* call tt love!” Years to How to Add Ten By J. A. Husik, M. D, ‘cpyright. 1012, by The I'ress Mublishing Co, (The New York World), Your Life GCOD CARE OF TEETH 1S ONE SECRET OF LONG LIFE, it to cone-iike struc: tures which serve in man @ very important purpose, ‘They are meant to afd in the proo- ess of digestion by cuttin: and grinding the food. The cutting 18 done by the four teeth tn front called the cutting incisors, while the grind- ing Is accomplished by the hindmost bixteen teeth, four on each side of the upper and lower Jaws, To unders:and the necess of the! teeth it {s suMcient to watch the pro- E by Mother Nature. At 0 teeth for the simple reason that he is brought into the world to be supported for some time upon food that neede neither cutting nor chewing. The teeth bqgin to grow early, and a of twenty teeth ts usually full- grown at about two years of age. The child in its growth has already been making somo use bf food that needed to be chewed, At about en years of age these first teeth are shed They are neither large nor strong enough for future needs, nor are there enough f them to fill the constantly growing jand enlarging cavity of the mouth. which in the cour: Hence a new permanent set of teeth ts provided, larger, better adapted for the purpo: nd stronger than those that were shed, ° Since nature has taken so much pains to furnish man with these instruments pains to keep them In perfect condiiton, The best one can do for his teeth is to use them. A muscle ; rows strong fore, to use your teeth, Bite into your food, to give the cutting teeth a chance. Practicy thorough mastication to give 0 grinders work to do and so keep ' and strong. Use of the | teeth will serve not only to strengthen {them but will also ald, according to | nature's intentions,’ in the process of j digestion. Carbonydrate foods in par- ticular (such as sugan bread, vege tables and starches) noed special mas- teation, While they are being ground up by the teeth the salivary glands of the mouth take thelr chance of discharging thetr function of into simple sugars, a form more ft for future digestion in the organs below. To keep the teeth in a healthful con- dition the general hygiene of the mouth and nasal passages must be looked after, There must be no obstruction in the 80 ae to prevent mouth For mouth breathing leady to ill-formed and badly arranged teeth. The guma and teeth should rece! y cieansing. No particles of food should be permitted to accumulate and remain in the mouth, The presence of food particles between the teeth forms the basis for the formation of acids of time break down the enamel and the bony structure of the teeth and finally lead to decay and |deetruction, Poor or decayed teeth, or jabsence of them, brings weakened and in ished digestion, with resulting ibreakdown of general health an@ a repeated Mr.| Of digestion, man must take further siortening of life, To remain in good health and to add to your life, take good care of your |toeth, Mxercise them by biting and ‘by use 80 does a tooth, Learn, there-!chewing; keep them wholesome and lelean by the use of powder, brush and | water, Where Dire Poverty and Crowding Are Supreme 66 MQ a grinding mass of poverty F (in China) that cannot be matched tn the Occident there emains but one general cause, namel: the crowding of population upon the means of subsistence,” says Dr, Ross tn hie book, anging Chines." For adults overpopulation not only spells privation and drudgery, but it means @ eraging about fifteen years short- Here are a people with standards, un- questionadly civillzed—ppaceahje, indus- trious, filial, polite, faithful to their con- tracts, heedful of the rights of others, Yet their lives are dreary and squalid, {for most of thelr margins have been swept into the hopper for the produc- tion of population, Two coarse »'ue cot- 4on garments clothe them, In summer the children go neked 1d the men atr to the waist, Thatched mud hut, no chimney, smoke blackened walls, un- wlaned windewe rude unpainted otesie, &@ grimy table, a dirt floor, for bed a mud kang with a frazzled mat on It. No woods, grass nor flowers; no woo floors, carpets, curtains, wall paper, tablectotls nov ornaments; no ooka, pictures, newspapers nor musical instru: ments; no sports nor amusements; few fesitvals or social gatherings, Uulity retgns supreme; and all it comes to ts to feed @ dirty, sordid, opium-sodden people living in hovels, wearing coarse, faded blue ta, crippling thelr women by foot bir 'tng and letting thelr boys and girls run about filthy and naked! No music, art, books, poetry, worship, refined associe- tion, allure of children, charm of women or glory of young manhcad ia its strength, Lite on @ low plane, the prey of petty _ cares and mean anxiet Infinite dill- nce, great cleverness i undanoe of ‘foresight and: thrift few sions; still e life thas Jen upea, destructive Greasy ond Stgreesing ) rting the starches” i A

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