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+ Che Seu waiorid. ESTABLISHED BY JOSHPA PULITZER. ig ronda OEE Feta a POE hye ‘World for the United Canad the International and Unk Moni “tolone Month VOLUME 53.......+5- avcececcecceseceseecNO, 18,656 -bahen DEEP MAGIC. Glendower: At my birth ‘The frame and huge foundation of the earth Chaked like o cowerd. . Hotspur: Why, so it would have done at the same season, if i four mother’s cat had but Ritten'd, though yourself had ) fe'or deen born, Glendower: I say the earth 414 shake when I was dorn.~ Phe heavens were all on fite, the earth aid tremble— These signs have marked me estraordinary; And all the courses of my life do show Tam not in the roll of common men.— 1 can call spirita from the vasty deep. fotepur: Why, 60 Can I! oF 80 con any Van. But\ with they come, when you do call for them? Glendower: Why, I can teaoh thee, cousin, to command The devil! Hotspur: And I can teach thee, coz, to shame the devil. By telling truth: Tell truth and shame the devil, The Colonel thrust hid arm into the air with two fingers held apart Re a V. “Indian sign language,” sald he. Who knows? . —_— ot SCIENCE AT ITS BEST. against the enemy. fort whip the besiegers, science into a notion thet the Fath hoes only hope leo glam case thet wil eep ott j Incidentally, “germs.” Jet fall o quiet but significant word of “apology”: T have heard there te a dig movement in America agatnet cutting up animale, and I may de criticised, but tf I had not sev- eral good guines pige to work on there would have been no @ecovery. 7 and untold millions unborn! - Science that can describe its results so simply, #0 deftly—and, aso not caeaes command deep admiration and respect, ie a ANOTHER LETTER. First Bpistle to the Corinthians. a thay can’t find words to describe it at fi @éventh hour and called for heme is being welcomed like f “esle survivor” , et * gtool this season. After Feom connoisseurs will never be first-class insuranod risks. 4 for years under efmilar circumstances, * would answer fully yet briefy, giving data, &o, It would mean much to hun- @reds of city folk whe hate town and Kw 6 IR, long for the country, Connecticut? (00 he Rains at Ths Breeng Please inform me on \qroek Gept, 18, 1808, tell? blishing C ny, Nos, 63 to | Published Datty Recent Sunday dy the Prese Publishing Company seal GTR ES SRE be, —__ pr enna hy oT are S © ONE who read Prof. Loeffler’s story of how he discovered ; N the diphtheria germ, as told in The Evening World last night, ¢ ; can have failed to be fascinated by the clear, brief, almo-t thrilling vividness and simplicity with which he desoribed and eum- marized a long, highly technical ecientific inquiry—one of the most far-reaching and important of modern times, No big words, no mys- terious learned phrases, no dwelling on his own achievements. Only! a wonderfully interesting little tale of how a poison in the blood may ‘be made to build up a defense that can at last be turned triumphantly _ .. His description of the good germs, the “soldiers” of the blood, how they need action, how their fighting power is increased by battle, and how life iteelf is a continual victory in which the dofenders of the is good reading for a public terrorized by sen- human body is a defenseless this doctor, whose work has eaved @ million lives from the awful former sacrifice to one of the most dread diseases, A few guinea pigs or the lives of millions of living human beings a0 briefly, «0 mod- remember, the Professor was speaking a lan- ETEOROLOGISTS from nine nations have come together to Mi tr to explain the weather tn Europe this eummer. So far ‘HE American heiress who threw over an Ttaltan nobleman a the UBT 90 the oyster lovers shan’t have all the good nows, a Puris J newspaper calls attention to the unusual number of mushroom femolezs in Burope and America who have plucked the fatel toad- for two columns how to tell the eible from the other kind the editor suddenly comes to @ nervous | the-times, common or garden variety of eoudiusion thet only solentists can be perfectly sure, and thet mush- ‘Wena: what day of the a CHICKENS WILL HATCH Omori. AS TRS ee 66 Syattertien Uke giving © supervision. in despair,” Gypsy said Mikel, the King, “I was elected ‘ander a Bull Moose, or reform, move- mem, but there is too much bull and mot enough moose about it!" Qfr, and Mrs, Jarr, who hea encoun- tered the Gypsy King and his tribe's camp while on an afternoon's jaunt on the Jersey outskirts, Metened = with Great attention. “To change the Gypsy nature, to ‘the Gyetem’ in the New York people, end to poltoe department,” continued the Wealer in Destinies, “Look around you! Dehold? ‘The usual, benighted, behind- Gypay encampment. Dirt, dogs, frowsy you see? What WOULD you ove if my Utoplan dream of the United Gypsy CANT coe thet the “quesrest sea creature yet” with the “four|sr'me wound muy in Londen, ould but parrot fest and @ heed like s Gils monster” is eo very much than the ones the esme Callfornia fisherman has been seoing be reatzed? “That put into effect, you would see The Difference. Chiee of the Romany people in America| te adout as easy as putting ag What do you | ‘women, vicious youngsters, squalling orate, loafing men. What SHOULD “What's the difference between a reformer and @ crank?” “A orank | working for the other party.” | “THE & Witt Witt. GROW , concreted @ypsy camps, with sanitary, ‘plumbing and @ fountain, bubbling sterilised and chemically pure water, Purling near the motor van that con- veyed the Gypsy band's travelling rary from modern encampment to modern encampment on weekly aohedules, “No orowbait horses, tied with ropes to rickety wagons would affront the eye when the Gypsy business was on an efficient business basis, with waste eliminated and the sales and produc- tion departments under painstaking ‘THEN you would see a Gypsy camp conducted under scientific industrial methods, Power fhrown off the gaso- |tine house-vans, water coils being re- Dlenished, the Gypsy van machinists busy brasing @ cracked oylinder, tho Gypsy tire men vulcanizing on @ new tread, or patching an inner tube, “Besides the motor vans, In which the up-to-date Romany business men and women would live, there would be & civio centre van and the motor kindergarten, with ite corps of trained teachers and nurses looking after the Years to OHINOTDS are glandiike struc- tures located high up in the throat back of the masa! open- ings, and they are made up of the same kind of tissue as the tonaile in the throat, Whenever one suffers from @ cold In the head or nasal catarrh or inflammation of the throat and the toneile, the adenolds are apt to become involved, In adults the cavity of the throat te quite large and the adenoids more or lees shrunken, so that when they are inflamed Kittle difficulty ts experienced and the disease takes a mild form. In young growing pergons, on the other hand, disease of the adenoids te apt to become @ serious condition and must never be neglected, In the presence of diseased and ewol- ton adenoids breathing through the ni trila Becomes diMcult or altogether im- possiie, The child fe therefore forced to breathe by the mouth, The mouth ts kept open, And in course of time the lower chin begins to recede, the teeth do not meet in the mouth as they nor- mally #hould and the procesa of masti- cation Is thereby hindered, Hence thesc children are apt to suffer from indiges- tion and poor nutrition, The latter may decome so gr aa to lead to eubnor- mal bodily and mental development, The growing boy or girl with ade nolis will be several Inches emalier in Y MARKET. MED ee OAsiseT Tue TooTHLess How to Add Ten By J. A. Husik, M. D. Copyeight, 1012, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Werld), GUARD AGAINST DANGERS OF ADENOIDS. “We wececeesoooooooes The Jarrs Learn How Vagabondage Might Be Brought Right Up to Date 98CIITTITTISDISTS 9O9ISTIITSOSIIOSS 95999999999900809 chiliren according to advanced practices in pedagogics and physical training for the young. “There would be the second-hand or rebuflt motor car department also. Here you would see old and new models, from ‘one-lunger’ runebouts to minety- horse-power six-cylinder machines; perhaps even # repainted steamer or two, or a few motorcycles—all being put into the best possible shape to trade with the farmers and flucksters on a cash or barter basis. “Meanwhile I would be in my sump- tuously fitted up exeoutive-office motor @ polite office boy in livery at the stepst such might be found, I refer, » to“the polite boy and not or steps. “Here I would be prepared to gtve tips on the stock market, and have for sale bound volumes of my ‘Guides To Wealth; Or, King Mikel's Hot Tips on Finance,’ ‘Hunches On the Horses, Or How To Make The Ponies Bring You Home The Kale,’ ‘The Roysl Road to Real Estate, or the Potice Captain's Guide,’ “The Blue Book of Matrimony; Or, How to Merry on a Sound Financial Your Life teen pounds lees, Im thelr schoolwork, t00, these children are often found te be backward, and unable, because of con- stant irritation, to pay much attention to what the teacher says. Gometimes, too, the condition leads to tmbecility and idiocy. Moreover, because of the obstruction to natural nasal breathing, the alr te breathed through the mouth, and tn this ‘way the chiki's health and life are eud- jected to the danger of infection, The air when allowed to pass by way of the nasal chambers becomes moistened and warmed and eo the Gelicate mucous membrane of the air celle in the lungs are not eubjected to sudden chilling. Again the navel mucous membrane is supplied with fine hatrilke processes ‘which intercept any dust particles or germe that might otherwise enter the » This te nature's way of check- \ the lunge, right at the very gateway of our breathing apparatus. Dinease of the adenoids also leads to affection of the ear, This may consist in @ Dussing, constant and annoying, or STRAPHANGER Witt HAVE Basis,’ etc. How !t chagrins one to thing of how the Gypsy might foretell Guccess in Love and Business on a Atty- fifty commission arrangement; rather than, as now, making guesses !n gener- alities to feed the pitiful vanities of ‘ant girls, for a with @ dirty, and, alas, very small, piece of silver!” The retorm Romany ruler wes oo overcome at these pictures of things that his mind conjured up, things as” they might have been under efficient consolidation of the Romany industries of swapping Iles and other things— end as they actually were—that he rolled up his eyes and groaned again. “This is all very interesting,” said Mr, Jarr, “but, if my question ts not an impertinent one, have you been brought up in the Gypsy business or id you learn tt in @ correspondence school ™ “I am netther a Romany born nor a correspondence school Gypsy,” replied Mikel, “I am a RIGHTFUL HEIR!" Mra, Jarr bent eagerly forward, And then, seeing that the Romany reform euler still healtated, she fumbled at her han@bag and drew out @ dollar bill, ‘That is characteristic of women. They are eo eager for romance that they'll pay to hear it. The, Gypey chief scanned the dollar Di carefully. “U'm looking for laundry marks,” he explained. “You know the Government and the banks are washing money now, and I have been thinking of quitting the hopeless Romany dubiness and opening an up-to-date bank note laun- ary.” “Never min4 that eafd Mrs. Jarn tell us how you KINOW you are & rightful heir! “Well, TH teM you @ dollar's worth,” ould the Gypsy King, But we hold over his telling of it ‘until tomorrow. —_—_ “Travelling” Stones. 66T aus ot 0 9 stones,” from the aise of & pea to six inches in diameter, are found in Nevada, ‘When Gistruted on « floor or other level gurface, within two or three feet of one another, chey immediately begin to travel toward @ oummon centre, and there lie huddled like @ clutch of essa in @ nest. A single atone removed to Gistance of three and a hals feet, upon being released, at once started with wonderful and somewhat comical celer~ ity to join its fellows, ‘These queer stones are found in a re- gion that is comparatively level ang little more than bare rock, Geattered 5 \tt may be @ partial er complete deat. |noss, F | For all theme reasons disease of the adenolds, particulany the young, must not be neglected. Neglect leads to pain, Glscomfort, disability, disease and death. Proper and timely treatment wat avold @ reformer that’s height for his or her age than the aver-|aM these and be conducive to good age child and welgh from tap te ff health and prolong ifs t — ary one aeemeeeeeameee enn aeneeeae oie etieaen ebanielientiaheene taennemnennaeeeannena aia over this barren region are little basins, trom a few feet te a rod or two in Giameter, and {t is in the bottom of these that the rolling stones are found. ‘The cause for the strange conduct of these stones Is doubtless te be found in the material of which they are com- 4, which appears to be londstone, magnetic iron ore, seattle. wemmee meester axe rT the sour milk coagulates the curd or casein. ie Copyright, 1012, by ‘The Pree Publishing Oo, (The New York World), The White Woman’s Burden. (After Kipting—Still farther.) , AKE up the White Woman's burden— T Giwe up the world for “him"— Go, bind yourself at the altan, To serve your “captive’s" whim; To watt, Uke a eweet Griselda, On a restive mate and wild— Your new-caught, untamed husband, Half Bultan and half ohti4, ROWLAED ” Take up the White Woman's burden— Have done with girlish daye— The dondons, flowers, triumphe, The eager, ungrudged protec; a Give up your fond silustone, : + Come down to baking bread, And receive, at last, your payment— ws 4 kies—and a pat on the head. Take wp the White Woman's durden— Cater, and cook, and Sweep up his stumps and ashes, ae, Scattered around like snow; By eudtle wiles and wheedting, , ‘ By tears and a woman's guile, You may coaa him to use an ash-tray, If he WANTS to after a while. - Take wp the WMte Woman's burden— And pay the price of peace, . Fill full the mouth of the pampered, And bid his headaches cease; ‘And when you have done your utmost To make him happy—then, Watch out for clube and chorwe girls Or do 4 all over again! Take wp the White Woman's burden — No iron rule of Kinga, But just the grind eternal Of picking up hie things! Of counting Ma shirte and collars, Of tempting his appetite, - Of watting—waiting—WAITING, "TH he comes home at night! Take up the White Woman's burden— 4nd reap the old reward— ‘A peck on the cheek at breakfast, Your clothes, and roof, and boardy , Lemlle, tf he’s in the humor— A frown, if he's'in o Auf— Bou have got a HUSBAND, And ten't that ENOUGH? NE POCKET VYCLOP But there! 856—Why do flying insects seek the lower regions of the air im wet weather? 857—Whon will water run through ipes to the top of a hill? $68—What causes a rainbow? 859—Why does @ soap bubble usu- ally burst before touching ground? 860—Why cannot we hear sounds as well in wet weather as in fine? HESBE questions will be an- @wered Monday. Here are re- plies to Wednesday's: %1—(Why does yur milk ourdle?)—The lactic acid of The May Manton:Fashions } Pattern No, 7676—Girl’s Empire Dre: % Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppo site Gimbel Bros.), commer Gixth avenue and Thirty-second street, New York, or sent by mall on receipt of ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your address pisiniy and always specify Patiome. } ze wanted. Add two cents for ictter postage if in a hurry, is inch wide, with 8 yards of banding. Mere War Thte ie cat in sizes for giris from 32—(How is the air heated 1)—The eun heate the earth. The earth heats the air )) that rests on ft. The heated air rises * and te replaced by cold alr which the earth in turn heats, &o. %63—(How do, mountaing effect ¢he winds?)—They check or change their course and, when snow capped, cool them. When @ wind's temperature 18 altered its direction may aleo change. %4—(Why does -hase around the sur indicate rain?)~The hase le caused by @ fine rain falling in the airs upper regions; and this is usually @ forecast of rain on th th. 35—(Why 1s the ground colder on « clear night than on @ cloudy night?) On a clear night heat radiates freely and is lost in the upper air. But on @ dark night the clouds check the radiae tion of heat from the earth. IMPLH i S eee, auch charming Sia Mnay are in very great autuma round n and three-quer sleeves will be ithi 1k, or charm: ict tte) D, noon” dress. > ‘s from a darker mate- rial and with high heck and “longer my adapted to simpler ace: gasione. with a colored ry it becomes @ party frock; yet the model is always The bi tv anmn- holes, and ‘the skirt constats of one straight piece, The two are Joined’ at slightly ‘raised Ww line. ‘The threesa ter sleeves are An ished with rolled-overt gus, but the short sleeves are simply’ gathered into banda, The hand kere hiel, hertha gives extreme. ly attractive and be- coming folds, yet the dress is mplete without it, and” the round neck finished with @ frill of lace is very charming, For the twelve-year nize the dreas wil Tor Guire 6% vards of mas terial 24." 4" yards a6, to 14 years of age, » 8 to 14 Vears, * | ' ' i