The evening world. Newspaper, April 4, 1913, Page 23

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Sr The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, April 4, 1918 « $e “S’Matter, Pop?” * FA = Ba « jecmitha! « BY « BA « By C.M. Payne BY # | Nel Die 4 k On IMG usladl i Yo! Mm NEVER LET i ou ner : a sony) nha Under Svan Man, ! lg Ly fem See You WAVER. PoP . MY Rures Must n Bue Sau SECEtAS Moves Gorva Wh vane 1A ps om ISHES OF ICE CREAM FIRM werd Hem ty “ 7 — ut NOW You CAN a nn 3 : E'Gf Your Five Senres? | =“ |\/BRIGHT SAYINGS | _ Of Your Five Senses? oe. Wenn te By Sophie Irene Loeb YAAS You BIG SIMP, IF Tar suv 6 vening or hildren Giana dame You DONT GET OFF THE S SOMEWHERE ON THE ‘ 1 Coprright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), 4 WIRE ILL TELL You NEXT FLoor | BLEN KELLPR, the wonder ah an OPTIMIST, is in itself a great) | WOT | “THINK OF You! Copyright, 1918, by ‘The Prem Publish ing Oo, (The New York Brening World), Laura, aged four, anked by a William was always in a bad humer 4 visitor of what nationality she was./on account of things continually found } 2 wonders, recently made her de-|"ving, throbbing example for the hear- ‘but as @ public speaker, If any |!ng, seeing, feeling folk who think this “rm an American,” she replied, “the; missing at home, for which he got the " . fame ua my papa ta; but my mamma] blame. person in the world l4,s very hard world indeed. SIMP EN? The “Take & SWING in French.” “And what t# your baby| One day, at school, while he wae agi: fa QUALAVERD 00! ec sevation' ts huthn. Baturo atl mk ILL FIND You DO AT ANY Guy THAT brother, then? queried the vinttor, junt| tated over the diseppearance of the con- ; ELV 8 6 ete eee asibed oy COMMER y ° simp! to see What the anawer would be. It, tents of « jar of Jam, the teacher, dur- 1 this young woman, | be despised or CONDEMNED. But . caus ME A 5! came: Ing the critical reading lesson on the who had only at/th® TRUTH that Helen Keller wants Tor command the 't? «ive to the world is at least worthy nt ont know. Me ain't big enough 0) solar system, scree him 3 jot thought. maniver j sense of touch, 19|° MISS MINNIE REED, he ejaculated, “te that ti { 2 one| NO matter how celf-nuMctent we think : beghrarisd THE 076 ware, we cannot bulld a Iittle fence Lge sell doris wrong Plate § | -- No, & Raymond street Brooklyn, N. Y, One cold night, a few years aro, we were all neated at the table eating our dinn ‘The butter was very hard, and, consequently, remarks were made about arcund ourselves and say, “Hands of! Here Tam, I don't need any one.” It Cote oe tg i against all natural law. The day shea PUBLICLY, comes when the self-auMeient, he of r -:weelth and power, the exclusive one That she has My little friend Tom, six years old, had enjoyed the false faces on Thanke- the interest as to what she says must be far-reach-: “tng. Her great hope is to impress folk with seeing eyes that are blind, saying: am going to try to make you feel that we are bound together. Perhaps you are thinking how blind I have been. ..You have the sun, and yet you are more blind “than I am. “It was the hands of others that made this miracle on me. Without my teacher # should be nothing. We live by and for each other. We are all blind and @eatt ftil our eyes are open to our fetlog men. If wo had a penetrating = ¥islor we would not endure what we see fn th world to-day.” ‘Te, © deaf, dumb and blind and to © forth without @ grievance qgainst creat and the studious one CRAVE the sym- pathy, help and approval of their fel- low creatures, How much more then, according to Helen Keller, do those less fortunate need the strength, help and approval? In the summing up, {s she not the breathing truth of what she advocates? She has PRACTISED what she {s now your eves, and you behold!) pREACHING. For, without the touch of the teacher's hand and the sym- pathy that went out to her and the need that was fulfilled, she would not now, in speech, be soliciting ald tn the Breat hope of helping humanity, of which she deems herself part and parcel. When you are tired of thinking of yourself TOO MUCH, think of Helen Keller. See, hear and feet as it was INTENDED for you to do, For, as she says, ‘Man was intended for the ion ang, in truth, to be designated tight." nnnnnnnnrrrrrrrrrrrrererreererrmreresereeerres Little Tales of the Railroads 1/1—-A MIDNIGHT RACE DOWN A MOUNTAIN. Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publish ing Co, (The New York Evening World), the first section of the Fast Lino Fast down a mountainside and Into Altoona, Pa, one midnight a quarter of a century ago. Plenty of wind, rain and fog that night. Moreover, the first section had left the Union Depot in Philadelphia half an hour iate. It was mostly a train of baggage and express cars, but on the end wero two day coaches. The sleepers were left for a second section. There had been a landslide near Al- legrtppus and three delayed coal trains had been hurried up the mountain after the delay, so the first section of the Fast Line found eix helper engines walt- ing to follow down the slope when It should have passed the top. “You want to keep a move on,” called ‘out a helper engineer, ‘We're goin’ l was no ghost train which chased to chase you down into Altoona yard | the Fast Line section, a pressure tre- |¢ |mendous upon the vestibuled platform. And the man at the express throttle} ‘Then the peril waa over. ‘ahead of the second section." laughed. The faet train was presently liding down the mountain grade with the steam shut off.. It, was when the (og ehifted off the patch of scenery lying between the two sides of the Betty marries? tion, You have to The Coquette. Sve and talks of our marr "man, and when we 4 yeally cares for me?" tam a ,two strings to her bow, 'W, R.” writes: “I have refused a to him. Am I acting rightly?" pas reformed, trol. , love: engin |more the dig freighter stopped, panted heavily for a ‘breathing space, then | pure aid khe is a filrt who likes | "s attentions because six years ago! tells me ‘ne took some money that didn’t belong! ‘back and saw something at which he did not laugh, Over across the valley a lone engine, with headtight glaring and furnace door wide open, was thundering down the grade at terrific speed. The express had been coasting under light brakes. Now the brakes were thrown off and steam crowded on, With ‘a Jerk and a jump the pursued train took on speed. Behind sounded the pro- longed signal of an engine out of con- i One of the helpers from the top of the hill had broken loose, When the grade was passed and the express had clattered through the cut|° Yt and out upon level ground the wild machine was a hundred yards behind. In & moment more there was a crash, @ thrill through the length of The collision lonsened the caught which had inade the helpers r helpless, Under control once Vincent's Advice to Lovers nae pee ore Marriage and Salaries. H’= much should a young man be earning before he Despite the statisticians, I don't believe you can set down any hard and fast positive rule on this qui answer, “It depends.” But here a few of the circumstances upon which It depends, No young man should ask a girl to marry him on any salary without telling her how much it ts, No young man should marry untit he and his flancee have planned a weekly or monthly budget which at least does not exceed his weekly or monthly salary No young man should marry unless he ha reason for thinking that he will be able to support a family by the time the family arrive But he lives at a distance and cannot come to see me often, How shall I F." writes: "A girl says she loves} nis attention?” ain ge, But whenever 1 am out of town on business you do meet hi he accepts the attentions of another | ties would be most unwise. out walking tries in every way to prevent his seeing ux together, Do you think shel ty the meaning of ‘ | ter or on a post-card. rtters stand for a French phrase, |! "J. 8." writes The | which translates “Please reply.” come and see me at Ei him since. Am I doing right?” I think under the circumstances you “D. ¥.; writes: ‘I recently met &jare perfectly right to wait for an young ‘hn who seemed to Ike me.J apology from him, eyes @ \ CELIEVE He's IN THts orice! of Prosnect Park Sea he Sindar goes are Anstruther aud 1 ya tiearhy tsland 3 fon and o hed on a tin lise alone ale ie attacked Dyake, who have tor in the well had a store in the rema’ ne night the sign but the native ally of the beleaguered more than eighty in niimber, They discover th 7 heat render the de f the struggle? hstand the exposure, the st the heartbreaking misery of the rock The future was blurred, crowded wit i fends passing and affright CHAPTER X11. shook restlessly the girl's sorrowful With love and pain, was fixed upon him, Summarily dismissing these xrisly phan of the mind, he asked himaelf what the Mahomm warning him against the trees on the right and the “silent death® that might come from them, to crawl forth to the Itp of the rock and investigate matters in that locality, when Tris, who also was busy with her thoughts, restrained hi “Walt a iittle whil of the Dyaks will v until night falls, to gay to you,” Th For the Defendant. OCUSTOMED now to implicitly accept his advice, she fought thelr scorched podies heneath the tar- Paulin brought a certain degree of re- They were supremely at was as naught compared laxation from the torments previously borne, For a lung Ume—the best part of an hour, perhaps—they remained allent. Tho sailor was reviewing the pros and precarious condition. & matter of su ¢ wore the Indian to Here the pros- that Jenks hi preme inporta® Be you. pleasant, natural self when | faithful to hiv promise. mM; more aggrossive tac- @ raised himself slightly her, Her face, beautiful and serene beneath {ts disfigurements, wore @n expression of settled purpose the life of him he dared not question pect was decidedly Was an old sowar, and the ex-officer of native cavalry knew how enduring was poor convict to ‘Please advise me as) home and military # 8. V. P." in a let That man, the interpreter,’ the chile} Bo aWay and forel yoman whom the sahib held wine and all-power- “vy. @” rie ‘ful Indian Government is very merciful V8." writes: “A young man WhO to offending nativ that he loves me promise@ to | their former crimes, ter, But he did | dear, for the all who thus condone “A mere bait.’ he protested, “In event it is hardly worth discussion And the answer woever willing he might b not come, and did not even write to! what could one man do among #0 man: Iedepends on whether or not the mam|excuse himself, I have not written to|T#@ Dyaks were hostile to him im race and assuredly against the foreign devil who had killed numbers, one-fifth Very Ukely, the Mustulman would lose bis lle or wounded, in rot Ir total force, The Wings of the Morning {u that nigag ino “ng to bring water to the fodt of the rook, Well, he, Jens. in,at have something to way in that regard, moon would Mumine nearly the whe Tf the Mahommedan were slain in front of the cavern hie Would travei to the hext word ° ded by a Nizam's cohort of slaugh- tered slaves, Even if the the vigilance a skins containing It. Again, granting all things went welt that night, what would be the final out- How long could array before his vision, thing dumb threats of madness and i jane. wan a quiet a quick sense no more,” “I think T will agree to those terms.” At. first he regarded her with undis- @uised and wordless amazement. the appalling thought darted through, ls brain that she contemplated Still Another USUAL Story y Louis Tracy Preme sacrifice In order to save him. clammy sweat bedewed his brow, but by Sheer will power he contrived to say— “You must be mad to even dream of Don't you understand 8 to you--and to me? to trap us, They at a they had you in thelr power they would laugh at a promise In the meee physical effort to assure himself that she was «till he gathered her up in his stron# hands, breathing, wonder By midnight the such a thing. Yes, eho was ther to his breast of his tired heart, wile Dered to her= an @ucceeded in eluding his present associates, where was the water to come from? There was none on the island save that In all lkel!hood the Dyake ing sampans, vive your loss? If we have to die, sweet one, let us die togethe: Then Iris flung her arms around his “You may be mistaken. have some sense of Gair deating. Even assuming that such was their intention, they may depart from tt. ready lost 4 great many men. They nave al- quite happy now," she it. The next week the weather w: very warm and the butter wan some- what soft. Little Billy, eit years old, suddenly exclaimed: “Mama, the butter te eney to-night, tom's ar” @, HAROLD SNYDER. 3013 Valentine avenue, New York, N. Y, Bronx. Little Harolé, aged five years, was visiting his aunt. While at dinner the grown-ups were talking and paying lit tle or no attention to little Harold. He was ready and waiting for his dessert, and to attract the others’ attention he wald: “Please, Aunt Mame, ie that pie an ornament?” MM, HUTCHINEON. East Thirteenth street, Hrook- «tving Day. A fow days later while he was looking out of the window a friend of the family, not noted for her beauty, passed. Turning te his mother Tom sald: “Why doce Mre. Greene alweve wear her falee face, mother DOROTHY I. PERKINS, 194 Sixth avenue, Brooklyn. ‘Two little brothers, Eddy and Augus- tine, went to see the parade Bt. Patrick's day. Hach carried a little blackthorn etick, of which they were very proud. Ae they stood watching the parade @ man said to the older brother, Augur- tine: “I will give you a dollar for your blackthorn stick.” Eddy spoke up and anid: “You foot kid, would you sell your country for a dolar ‘Mrs. JOHN J. HENNESSY. ‘0. 911 Anna street, Elisabeth, N. J. This contest will close to-morrow, Guarding the Digestion. LL fe has ite physical basis, not! A in the food we eat, but in that Dart of It which ts digested and aentmilated, Witheut thorough diges- | tion and proper assimilation food not only fails to do guod, but becomes an | agent of great harm to the entire ia | paratus, there ‘fore, by means of which the food eaten is transferred into bone, brain, nerve and muscle, lg an extremely important and its health and integrity muat Ve Jenlously guarded in order to main- tain a sound condition of body and mind allke, It Is very easy to abuse the organs of And maltreatment of them la very common. Both tn the home as well an at the lunch counters and in urante one may readily see how nature's lawe aro disregarded to the detriment of health and life. ‘The most common form of abuse Is nur eating, Nature has placed the teeth and the salivary glands in the mouth for distinct and definite pur- chief, having gained his main object, sobbed brokenly. “I didn't—!nagine~it lemty of water, ‘ould keep them at bay We lose nothing; we eat deal Ly endeavoring to he gasped, “what are you say- ‘The unexpocted ound of her name on his lips almost unnerved her, martyr ever went to the atake with more tled purpose than this pure woman, to t!mmolate sake of the man she i all for her, faced death in many Now it was were Mt with a squatted the ghouls of privation, mise jot aware that nee, luminous ded not the Inferno; ated a Paradiae in an earthly hel ‘Then Irie drew herself from the man's She was delightfully shy and y meant "So you really do love me?" she whis- J, with shining eyes pered, crimson-ftac and parted Ips. He drow her to him again and kissed I have thought gazing at him ateadily, “It 44 worth trying are abandoned He was about scarce seeing him, as a last expedient. by all, #ave the Lord; and it does not appear to be His holy will to help us on We can atrugwte on here until we Is that right, when one of us may doudt to the winds, in atore she was hia, not in man's power to part A glorious effulgenc: love had given him the confidence of He would pluck her from the her, The Dyak was not yet born who should rend her from ne sald. ‘None nture into the open And I have something of ¢ Her very candor had betrayed her, She qizength of Goliath, id go away with these monstrous wea, endure them, even flat whe and they were fe! from the jsland. And then—she would In her Innocence she im- agined that self-destruction, under auch , Was & pardonable offense. Bhe only gave a life to eave a iife, and Kreater love than this Je not known to solemnity tn her d never heard be= It chilled him, Hin heart f evil omen, id turned perils that environ: fondled her rubbed her cheek with his rougl The sudden sense of ownership fair woman wal bew!ldered hin she said, you that If I were given up to he and his followers would in @ tempest of wrath ant n, had it in his mind to eom- pel her into reason, to shake her, an shaker a Wayward child He rose to his knee: formed notion in his fa he looked at her, and @ mist seemed to shut her out from hie sight Jost to him already? Wi wone before an idle dream of joy and aricf, a wisard's gtimpse of mirrored Bertie? Was Irie, thrown to him by to be snatched though you did not tell ‘ with sudden red brain, Then at girlish romance was this? held her away «ingerly, that he could look into her “Oh, tt 19 true, quite tr ing the locket you recognize your own hand- you not certain, just you really did love me?" How often would she me, clear and reao- happiness and vi the erystal-soul the storm-washed wav y by some irresistible and malign Then thie eu- ‘poses; the former to grind the food to For a little while they yielded to the|@ugere. When eating !@ done slowly Rlamour Of the divine Knowledge that! and deliberately the foud le converted amidst the chaos of eternity e had found its mate. There was no need ndous in Its pow- unfathomable in ite n into @ pulp and intimately mized with the salivary ferment. When food te wuiped down it te netther masticated thoroughly nor intimately mixed with ce | the salivary ferment, { In this manner the first step of the digestive process ta omitted, and an ie y| extra burden thrown on the more dell- by lappiness, health and long life. How to Add 10 Years to Your Life — By J. A. Husik, M. D. — Covgright, 3918, ag The Pree Publishing Co, (he New York Brening World), " cate organs below. The result Is éle- euse, mild at first, but in the course me becoming serious, undermim- the general health and shorteniag tn; i Nature meant the digestive fuse tione of the body to he pertodic. Eat- ing at all hours of the day and night te injurious, It robe the important organs Of digestion of the necessary rest. The result is frritation of the delicate mu- cous structures and the ferment glands which digest und inflate the feed. Such Irritation extending over monthe or perhaps years, is bound in the end to result in grave disease. Another common in committed against the organs of digestion ts the taking of food known to be disagree |able and harmful to one's system. Unable to withstand the dictates of the palate, many are led to eat foods ghat are dificult of digestion and of flation. Prolonged abuse in this diree- tion leads to chronic diseases of the stomach with impaired digestion, poor nutrition, low vitality, eickness and death. Constant, dally use of alcoholic deve . ai able to persuy ” for- | eri 4, with or without one’s meal Horseshoe Bend that the engineer looked slid away into the yards, strutuer go uff. pair would have « task of exceeding would come—this way, but—I am thank-|@ pulp, the latter to contribute Ir 1 — pions Waleed far wth sh eevee AifMculty tn obtaining one of the Jars ur bargain that they fret sup: {ui—it has come." wt tor the digestion of starches and |turne what may at fret seem a harm: Jee indulgence into an absolute neces: atty, The evils of this habit may be come so great that it le a positive crime against one's health to run ¢ risk of becoming addicted to It. Atl- cohol is a poteon to all the organs and tissues of the body and must be avold- ed, Obedience to nature's laws in the matter of food and 4rin i) repay nn nee NEEEE EERE repeat that wondrous phra er they bent over the tiny slips per, There it was again—"T lov =twloe blagoned in magic sym! With blushing eagerness she told him how, by mere accident of course, she caught sight of her own name, It was not very wrong, was it, to plek up that tiny scrap, or those othera, which she could not help seeing, and which une folded thelr simple tala eo truthfully? Wrong! It was ao delightfully right that he must kise her again to emp! of course, an alr of grotesque \) because indulged in tattered individuals @ tarpaulin on a rocky ledge, ant eur- rounded by bloodthirety savages intent on their destruction, Such incidents re- auire the setting of convention, the con- servatory, with Ite wealth of flowers and plants, @ summer wood, « Chippen- dale drawing-room. And yet, God wot, men and women have loved each other ‘ay old world without stopping jer the appropriateness of place Iria de. “Robert—I must cal! you Robert sew— there, there, please let me get a word in even edgewaye—well then, Rebert dear, T do not care much what new. I euppose it was very wi end fool- feh of me to speak a8 I did before—be- fore yon called me Iris, Now tell m once. Why ai@ you call me Iris?’ a i ais er. ling, please, Why id yeu ause I could not help myself. It out unawares.” “How long have yeu thought of me onty aw Irie—your Iris?” “Ever since I first understood that somewhere in the wide work? was a dear woman to love me and be loved.” But at one time you thouxht her name was Pilzabeth?? on, & mirage! That is why christened you had the wis alls ¥ dom of the gods.” interlude, ‘They grew More sedate. It was so un- dentably true they loved one another that the fact was becoming venerable with age. Iris was perhaps the first to recognize its quiet certainty. ‘As I cannot get you to talk reason- ably, your The «irl had hardly eaten a morsel for her midday meal. ‘Then she wae despondent, utterly _ broken-hearted, Now she was Mied with new haope, ‘There was @ fresh motive in existence, Whether destined to live an hour oF half @ century, she would never, leave him, nor, of course, could he ever, ever leave her, Some things quite {mpoasible—for example, that they should part. r (To Pe Continued)

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