The evening world. Newspaper, January 17, 1913, Page 21

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Fe ete mnetwrnn wns Rae eww ng World Daii The Eveni You SEE THE BEAUTY OF ITIS, HE CAN SLAM IT ALL. OVER THE HOUSE ID STILL NOT. DAMAGE) STEP TO ONE GIDE AD WATCHER GO The ‘High Cost of Living 8] my * And How to Reduce It. a. Coprigta, 1818, Wy The Pr Pebtnhing Ox, (The Hew Tat Bening Welt). NO. I11.—AS TO “INFANT INDUSTRIES.” ue 53° t 5 : 358 H E H 7 London, cost $100 in New equltiplied ‘indefinitely to : ee hy the Ghee |neceee OD upon « time long, long ago, the ttle Book-People knew nothing of Hush-a-Byo Land, Then the only land known to them wae Book- Lana, Mamma used to read stories to the children during the day. And at night the Book and all the little peopic inside it were plated upon @ shelf] for fifteen years would put flocks olothes on every man, women and child the Finatly they came upon Bessie tuckcd all snug in her bed, The little Book-People romped and played upon Bessic’s pillow. They sang and danced and bicked their heels over their heads! Oh, they had a barre} o° fun! But every one became awfully tired and soon one after another fell into Hush-aBye Land, etty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers Is Your Child Doing Well At School? By W. Dz Poiwermacher. “HH. Ga% writes: “ A certain young Eove at First Sight? man takes me out s great deal and TERY now end/I like tim very much. But he will then I receive! insint emeking a pipe wherever wo a letter some-| go. He won't smoke cigars or cigur- thing iike this: although I have urged him ¢o ‘Stall Lecturer, N.Y. “JERUSALEM THE GOLDEN.” “I have known a/do so, What shall I do?’ Cupyeight, 1018, bj Mehing Co, HIS very deautiful hymn ts from girl (or = man)| I should refuse to go out with him Nike No Vee tenon Werte | ‘@ translation made by Dr. Neale three months. I if he persisted in betng so rude. NATURAL HISTORY. in 1851 of @ part of the hymn of Bernard of Cluny, written about 1120, Bernard's three thousand lines furnished 4n English poem of four hundred and forty-two, which, when published in’ 1869, immediately became popular. It has had @ wonderful success, and from it are our familar hymna: “Brief life is here our portion; “The world is very evil;"’ “For thee, O dear, dear country;" and jerusatem the Golden.” quote the very beautiful fourth etansa: “O aweet and blessed country, The home of God's elect! O sweet and blessed country, That eager hearte eapect! Jesus, in meroy brings us To that dear land of rest; Who art, with God the Father, And Spirit, ever die Bernard of Cluny, who must not be am very much ia love with her (or him.) Wouldn't it be all right for us to marry?” Of course the an- awer {6 no—ten thousand times no. ‘There may be love at first sight, though I doubt It, There cannot possibly be married happiness, except it is preceded by @ really close friendship, and time {s an essential ele- ment in the cultivation of euch friend- ehfps, J ‘If you have any business sense at all you do not cloose a partner for your A Lonely Girl. “L, M." writes: ‘Tiem ftainy good- looking and jolly and full of fun. But no young man I know seems |CoUect) te predominant, The parent i specially interested in me, although I| making a serious mistake when he or am not etighted in any way. What 1] she shows a lack of interest. He may I do to create more of an tmpression?”’| collect plotures that are given away Don't do anything except be yoUr! by the vendors of merchandise, tt may natural self and your chances will come) ys guttons, M may be marbles, of It ip due Wap, may be toads, spiders or snakes, | Encourage htm to make ghelves, boxes | or cabinets, in which to keep his col- T a certain period in every child's A Nfe the habit to “collect” (or ‘more correctly, the instinot to “A, B." writes: “I am engaged to a girl, but IT have learned that another ‘irl to whom I pald attention iwo years| lection classified and arranged. ago is very unhappy because she no| The conscientious mother should be longer sees me, What shall I do? | careful not to show fear of any of the I don’t see that you can do anything lad's animal exhibits, lest she lead the except marry the girl for whom you, child to belteve in the common super- really care—presumably the one to| stitions to the effect that this or that whom you are engaged. [innocent creature ie harmful. How firm whom you have known only three | manthe, Then why display such foolish, auch mad haste in selecting the partner of the most important enterprise In your Mfe, your marriage? | f ‘ cand repent at lelsure ts}, a : many of us, even to this day, have; confounded with his equally celebrated ReSreae a: Hash ee eanen + “D. 8," writes; “A young man whom | falled to wipe out of our minds the | countryman and contemporary, Bernard oe : A I met last summer wrote to me from his! thought that to handle @ frog may |of Clairvaux, was born at Morlaix, tn Unconventional college and asked me to answer the | result in the acquisition of warts! Brittany, of Engiish parents, probably ‘ letter. I did so, but have not heari| If the child bring into the house a|not fer from the year 1100. He 4 Acquaintance. from him since. Should I write again | handful of cocoons, ana pieces of dried hed “8, BR.” writes: “I have been calling on a young lady whom I met in a street and ask him the reason?" | leaves are dropped on the floor, do not I am @fraid that if you do he will order him “to take that dirt right out the interest In a subject awakened | car flirtation, I was never introduced think you too eager to continue the ac-jof the nouse.'’ Immediately take an} your direct orders pales into jnalg- to her, but have known her three) quaintance, j Interest in what he ts doing; show him | aificance, months, Would I be wise to provose — how to keep the cocoons in boxes in a| After hts collection has been mide | her ”, * writes: ‘ .| Poom that ts always kept warm, Point then point out to him the long, tubular Per siciy cat oe He iar CRE in-out to him how to mount the moth that| sucking tongue of the butterfly and ord . i will soon make {ts appearance and then| the four wings covered with beautiful A owrl young man put] t present mA tH her F }./ sive Dim a set of woodworking tools, | overlapping scales that adhere to your | a scartpin In my coat and [ didn't). On general pi iat @ man 1 alee that ho can build a shelved box in| fingers when handled, Then tell him tice It until I reached home. Should} W#8 presented to @ lady. which to keep his collection of butter- erpillar with | I fetnen it to him, and what should I) i caged files and mothe, s-covered box. way if [ do?” “P. L." writes: “I have known a gitl| Remomber that thia Instinct to collect | For several Haya it wit! eat and eat | Meiurn it by ail means, and tell him! of etghteen for tive months and T wapt| usually comew but once during the lite-| and eat. Finally {t will stop eating and | {her to marry me. But she asks Me $0! time of a child—usually when the child walt -several: years aud also to meet! ig in his or her twelfth or thirteenth "E, D.” writes: “What ts the mean-! her parents first, What do you ad-| year, Take advantage of that natural ing of a amp turned upside down vise?” fastinct,) Do mot squelch it. And you laying moth. em a letter?” Do as the girl suggests, She is wiser | will have at hand @ means of interesting ‘Thus, what would have been » “ary Is Jo capoced to. mean 5 love 7eee ee ~ exmencnmencnneemnattionct!4,1B, comparison. with which se Gust” lesgom. te the class room le, | spin a Kind of @ cobweb around itsel?. you cannot accer will transform the cocoon into the egs- | Historic Hymns By Frederic Reddall Cnpyright, 1018, by The Press Putéisbing Oo, (The Tho child knows of the change that ta lathe tool it WIM cht steel at the rato y Magazine,iFriday, January 17. Then they ali knew where kiddies go when night comes, It ie to Hush- @-Bye Land! In this land werc many, many children who gave the Book- People great welcome. Again they danced and sang, romped ond played. The Uttle Book-People acted many Uttle stories in which they’ took part when, inside the Book. The children loved them much better than ever defore. When morning came upon them, Bessie and the little Book-People in Husha-Bye Lond eaid “Goodby,” and all solemnly promised to meet again, Bessie rubbed the peepers out of her eyes and awakened, The Uttle| Book-People crept back into Book-Land and closed the cover, But all that day they talked of the bully time they had had in Hush-a-Bye Land. Bver since that vory first time the little Book-People have visited Husha-Bye Lond every night, And I gwees they always will, i ELEANOR SOHORER, The Day's Good Stories Not a High Climber. York Fiventng World), monk at Cluny under Peter the Vener-| (OU, FAULKNEM of ‘Texas wes walking | able, who was abbot there from 1122 to cong ae’ teed a Geely none’ he | ‘ot ‘ De ci { he met an old darky proceeding slowty on . He wrote a poem, “De Contempt | nig way to the village, witither he wee bound to Mundi," In which he mercilessly raked | secure his stock of dolmoco for the coming week, | the vices and follies of hin day, In about | "Well, Uncle Primus, bow are yout” asked the 3,000 ines; portions of which were tran- | Colonel, slated by the Rev, John Mason Neale, | “Ys, suh; yes, suh, Maree Faulkner; yas, sub. Ab is feelin’ fine, Ab doan remember as ah e an English Ritualistic i | oy “irl aecemenccedbageicoyger felt no bettah in mah life, but sum way rather Dr, Neale pronounces these verses Of 4), som to be gettin’ to de tahm of lite wen! Bernard “the most lovely, in the same 4h% Jookin’ fur de low spots 1a de fence,"—New- way that the ‘Dies Irae’ is the most ark Star, sublime, and the ‘Stabat Mater’ the most pathetic.” All of the hymns taken from this poem, as noted above, are! among the finest gems in recent Eni Ush and American collections, “Jerusalem the Golden” {5 classed among the Seven Great Hymns of the mediaeval church, and deservedly ranks with any of the series. In 1861 Dr. Neale records ¢hat in fourteen new hymnals more or less of the verses had da place, In 185 he could add to Increasing number the Bcotch | ook, the Bwedenborgtan collection, and that for the American Lutheran Church, In 185 “Jerusalem the Golden" was seventh fn rank of aff the favorite Eng- (ish hymns, The melody of this hymn was com- cea tae \ It Surely Was. GERMAN who had mot bem tp the country very long walked into @ drug! store one day, The firs thing thet caught his attention was an electric fan bussing busily on the soda counter, He watched it with great interest for eume time, then, turning to the tlerk, be td golly, dat’s a Iifely squirrel vot you got ia n't itt! ——Bverybody's, — Last Letter Defined It. dare, woved= os the kk howse, we nodded with approval (frame of | .[Jong bows and poisoned arrows. we howe and we cute ned, Maboas, the be sator Clark, wa! * | “Then we came to this lawyer's gpemt, piilared | house of pale stome, and wy friend weld | ‘Hut eurely, he paves built « plage tike that | owt of this practloet” "No," geld I, ‘mot out of his practice—out | I" ie prectigns,* "Albany Jourual, pa eae a Only Political Friends, posed by Dr, Ewing. 4 live Interesting subject to the boy; and he will welcome additional know! edge on the same asubject-not only welcome, but thirst for it, = senate Steelite, New Metal. EVERAL days ago a tan elit on Mayor CEH remarkatle S Shank and skal for @ permit to paddle claimed for uuntl certain date, saying he would tate | which Is com 75 per cent, out @ license at gag tine amd It could be dated | of cobalt and the remainder of chro- ‘The Mayor wag accommodating and ac mium. It may be cast and ground to a nied the man to the City Compiratier's of- | fice, | “Here ie one of my very beat frien fine edge, is impervious to rust and the action of actda and highly Méxible, As aid the Mayor to Fred B, Alin, Deputy Oity Comp: | uniter, "He wante @ permit to peddle, | Of 200 feet a minute, a speed at which} ‘1 gues we can arrange that,” replied Akins, | mel would ordinarily burn. Certain “What ts hi» name!” mpdifications of this alloy will cut glass ond even quarts crystal ."" add the Mayor, turing to Bis “friend,” gy caer ieee i r2. (Copgright, 1012, by Frank A, Munsey Oo.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECKDING CHAPTERS, CHAPTER IX. Man and Man. ARZAN of the apes lived on in ‘his wild jungle existence with Nttle change for several years, only that he grew stronger and wiser and learned from his books more and more of the strange worlds which lay somewhere outside his primeval forest. To him life was never monotonous or stale. There was always Pisah, the flab, to be caught in the streams and the lakes, and Sabor, the tiger, with his ferocious cousins, to keep one ever on the alert and give. asst to every inatant that one spent upon the ground. Oftén they hunted hihi, and more often he hunted them, but though they never quite reacheé him with ¢heir eruel claws, yet there were times when one could acarce have passed a thick leat between their talons and his smooth hide, whics Quick was Sabor, the t and quick were Nuna and Sheeta, his cousins, but ‘Tarzan of the apes was lightning. With Tantor, the elephant, he made friends. On many moonlight nights Tarzan and the elephant walked to- wether, and’ where tho way wae clear ‘Tarzan rode, perohed high upon, Tan- tor's mighty back. All elwe of the jungle were his’ ene- tnjea except hig own tribe, among whom he now had many friends. Many days during thes years spent in the cabin of his father, wher alll lay, untouched, the bon if Parents and the little skeleton of Kala’s baby. At elmhteen he read fluently and understood nearty all he read. Also he could write, with printed let- ters, rapidly and plainly, but script he not mastered, for, thouwh {here everal copybooks among his treas- there was go little written Eng: lish ‘in the cabin that he saw no tise for bothering with this form of writing, though he could read It laboriously, Thus at eighteen we find him an Eng- Mah lordling who could speak no Eng- Ish, yet who could read and write his native language. Never had he seen {human being other than himself, for the little area travelled by his tribe was watered by no great river to bring down the savage natives of the interior. High hills shut It off on three sides, the ocean on the fourth, It was alive with Hons and tigers and leoparde and polsonous snakes. Its untouched mazes of matted jungle had as yet invited no hardy ploneer from among the humane beyond its frontier, But as, Tarzan of the apes sat one day In the cabin Of bis father delving into the mysteries of a new book the ancient security of his fungle was broken for- ever. At the far eastern confine @ strange cavalcade strung, in single file, over the brew of a low hill. Th advance were fifty black warriors armed with slender wooden spears with ends baked hard over slow fires, a n their hacks were oval shields, tn their tones hune rings, while from the kinky wool of thelr heads protruded gay fea- thers. Across thelr foreheads were tattooed three parallel lines of color, and on each breast three concentric circles. ‘Their vellow teeth were filed to sharp points and thelr great protruding lps added still further to the bratishness of thelr. & appetrance, Following them were several hundred women and cnildren, the former bear- ing upon their heads great burdens of cooking pets, household utensils and ivory, In the rear were a hundred war- riora, similar in all respects to the ad- vance guard, That they more greatly feared an at- known enemies might lurk ahead was evidenced by the formation of the col- umn; and such was the fact, for they were fleetng from the white man's sol- diers, who had eo harassed them for rubber and {vory that they had turned upon their day and massacred emall conquerors one @iwhite officer and a detachment of his black troops, Fer many depo the. eee Wot Like Any Story Yoo Have Read TARZAN OF THE APES By Edgar Rice Burroughs. — The Romance of a Jengle Man and a Yankee Girl. themselves on meat, but eventually « stronger body of troops had come and salien «pon thelr village by night to revengy the death of thi comrades. ‘That ulght ihe black soldiera of the white man hed had meat-a-plenty, and this little remnant of a ones, powerful tribe had slunk off into tie gloomy - jungle toward the unknown and free- dom. But what meant freedom and the Pursult of happiness to these savage blacks meant consternation and death to many of the wild denizens of their For three days the little cavalcade marched slowly through the heart of this unknown and untracked forest, until finally, early in the fourth day, hey came upon a little spot, near the of @ small river, which seemod less thickly evergrown than any ground they had encountered before. Here they set to work to build a new viage, and in @ month a great clearing had been made, huts anq palisades erected, plantains, yams and maise planted, and they had taken up their C4 Wife in thelr new home. Here there Were no white men, ro soldiers, nor any rubber or ivory to be gathered for thankless Several ere the dlacks ready fallen prey to old Sabor, the tiger. Gnd becuse the jungle was 80 Infested with the and bloodthirsty cats and with lions und leopards the ebony warriors hesitated to trust themeelves far from the safety of their palisades. But one day Kulonga, a eon of the old far into the west. Warily he atepped, his slender lance ever read: Mis Yong ‘oval shield rraeped in hi and close to his body. * At his back hie bow, and in the quiver upon his shield many slim, straight ar- tows, well smeared with the thick, dark, tarry substance that rendered deadly thelr tiniest needle prick. Night found Kulonga far from the Palisades of pond cat ie village, but atill headed wes€ward, and climbing into the fork of a great tree he fash- joned a rude platform and curled him- aolf for slean. mi c. Three miten west of him slept’ the ribe af Kerchak, My ‘morning’ tHe apen were Farly the next astir, «moving through the jung search of food. Taran, as we custom, prosecuted his search th the rection of the cabin, ao that by lelsurely ‘hunting on the way ‘Wot yg oy the ume he reached the beach. tered by Ones and twos and threen-in all trectape, put always within ind of a signal of ™. Kala hi | Mores slowly areaean ee: nant track toward the % Bustty ‘engasea in, turning over "rotted limba and loge in search of ¢soulent bugs and fungi, when the faintest shad- of.a strange noise breyght, ber to rds ‘before new the érall 4 down this leafy tun- traight at the stentthily figure of @ strange and fear re. turning, moved rapidly baek ‘along trail. She did not run; but. after the manner of her kind when not roused, sought rather to avold than to escape. Close after her came Kulonga, Here was meat. He could make a killi feast well this day. On he hurried, his spear potsed for the throw. At @ turning of the trall hi mi In upon another straight pear-hand went far back, Ughtning like, be- jeek hide. Out shot the arm, and the apear sped toward Kala. A poor cast. It but erased her With « cry of rage and pain K turned upon her. tormentor, In an wifi the weight of hurrying apes, swin; rapidly toward the scene of troub! anawer to Kaln's scream, ‘ Kala charged Kulonga unstung bow and fitted an arrow with.almost Drawing the shaft far back he drove the poisoned missile ight into the heart of the great abe- ap ‘With a horrid scream Kala plunged forward upon her face before the esten- Jahed membere of her tribe. t Roaring and ah ing, the apes das! towand Kulonga, but that wary savage was fleeing down the trail I! at du antelope. He knew soneining ow rocity of these wild, hairy cren- and hie one desire was to put miles between himself and them an he possibly could. ‘They followed him, racing through the trees for @ long distance, bi by one they abandoned of the tragedy, had ever aeen a man he- Tarzan, and so they won- 4 vaguely What strange manner of ure it might be that had invaded their juni On the far beaeh by the little Terzan heard the faint echoes af the qen- filet, and, knowing that something was seriously amiss the tribe, he tened rapidly the direction of

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