The evening world. Newspaper, January 5, 1920, Page 19

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yi / = MONDAY, JANUARY 5, 1920 Scientist’s Son in Spiritual World “Tells’’ Father of Wearing White Robes; Sees Whiskey Sodas Mixed The Day of Rest Coprrtant, (Tho Now York Eventng World.) ITH the arrival, in a few days, of Sir Oliver Lodge, the British LET'S RUN OUR HOUSE ON A DIFFERENT SCHEDULE THIS YEAR | MY DAYS of REST HAVE BEEN A FIZ2ZL. Raymond Lodge Speaks Through Medium and Describes Life “Over There.” | 1920, by The Pres Publishing Co, W scientist of international reputation, New York will hear at first Jhand the evidence and arguments for the survival of the dead and thei? communicgtion with the livirg as accepted by the greatest living selentific authority to take seriously Modern Spiritualism. , Sir Oliver is no intelligent amateur playing with a ouija board, nor is his faith based simply on the pathetic yearning desire which in this coun- try—and even more often, abroad—has led into the spiritualistic fold those wives, mothers, fathers whom war drafted into the ranks of the bereaved. | It is true that one of the most remarkable and touching accounts of an ap parent entente between the dead and the living is “Raymond, or Life and | Death,” Sir Oliver Lodge's own story of conversations with his son who died heroically in France, Nevertheless, as far back as 1908 the man often | called the discoverer of wireless telegraphy and the proponent of the elec: | \, tric theory of matter—to nathe only two of Sir Oliver Lodge's many claims | ‘to distinction—announced his belief that messages from the dead had been received by the living. He then summed up the attitude of himself and other investigators foward the problem of communicating with the dead by means of speech | Uk BER i theory of thought transference from | the mind of the inquirer to that of | the medium. Raymond told his | | mother of a photograph of himself, | & e) ! KNow Yu REN TGer ) ss N YouR ye “— oF REST through mediums and automatic|in the midst of a group of officers | ‘writing, in the following expressive | taken in France, about which no | apite cr epessh; nies member of the fumily knew. ‘They | WHY NoT HAVE were sure there was some mistake. Two months later a letter came from the mother of another officer in the group, offering to send a copy of a photograph which, when received, answered exactly to the description |fiven by the supposed Raymond, | | Speaking through the medium, The book not only gives further proof of the author's conviction that | “communication across the gulf is possible,” but furnishes interesting details of what life “over there” is j“Like excavators engaged in bor- a tunnel from opposite ends, amid ie roar of water and other noises, qe aro beginning to hear now and en the strikes of the pickaxes of comrades on the other side. The loundary between the present and | dfiture states is still substantial, but | js wearing thin in place He also declared flatly that it was “Lhe business of science” to ascertain BREAKFAST AT NOon AND DINNER AT SUPPER TIME ? if there arc not modes of existence | like | Mighcr thau vu: own and ir these; “Gan you fancy secing me in white cpio interact without material sur-| robes?” Raymond asks his father. undings. lor nineteen years the) “Mind, I didn’t care for them at first Principal of the University of Bir-| and wouldn't wear them. A fellow is thingham, ho at length relinguished allowed to have earih clothes here Wis post ‘to devote more time 0) until he gets acclimatized, op CLE era very similar to the one A year before the I pinch myself some- uinced to the British see if it is real, and it is. for the Advancement of . I have got a new tooth in the place which he was President: “Already | of another one that wasn't quite | the facts examined have convinced | fight. A man that lost his arm got me that personality persists beyond | another ‘one—he's got two arths.ngy bodily death. ‘The evidence to my “People here try to provide every ind gocs to prove that discarnate | tying that is wanted. A chap who , ae intelligence, under ce lain conditions | ¢ Over the other GAY p Ale YOu CHANGE THE y interact with us on the material | ar. But there R t i the indicoou coming within |S ogg tat thet aterm | LORS OF MEALS YOu ¢ dur scientific ken; und that gradu- | everything; not as you dott of solid | [= CHANGE Coors ) ARE EE UG TREE enki Vee ae r, but out of essences and «thers orstanding of the nature of a larger.| ing prises. It's not the same son Hedarih eed nent and, Ol the! 6 plane, but they were able ¢ conditions regulating intere oe eres eee sfeross the clinsr A body of r He ufacture what looked lik in investizators has even now fe aymond told about his dog tha reache! Dux but prom- that there is no real breach of con- crous but Prom-| was with him—the same, only tha sting shores of a fe society ror| his stu ail was long and hairy. prenbtg coe Fn Also he declared that they can even wht ete muaie’a dramatic Senin’ | Manufacture whiskey sodas for those ident, he mac dra ic € : ¢ for t " n of faith in practically all the} ee "7 dbne secret of my con- tua. % have cl ned. victior ir Oliver Lod sums up, ay it on definite eclentific| up o¢ ly that personality exists, unds,”” he asserte: say it beslput that it» continued existence is | pute x now thas (iy is Baie | more: entwined with the life of every Ine still exist, bec > 6 ed | aay tha is becn gr! ull ed; | ep hom Sormmudication: ia possible | Sey rrcr ies eek een er cen ( ) orld RSS SRO RET SRT JANUARY 5, 1920 Fables for the Fair By Marguerite Mooers Marshall MONDAY, by The Pre hing Co. (Tue Now York Erentng The Fables of the Widow’s Might— Moral: pstlaht, 190 : *s Ne f FACT! ny pet stig co, By Maurice Ketten } It’s No Fable, It’s a j To SLEEP Intelligent ax man's Ideal Woman should be nething better than knew the \nd she had MONEY! Yet even with all these advantages She found her prince strangely uninterested In despair, like another Cinderella, She told her troubles to her Fairy Godmother “He's yours, my child. It's a cinch,” ' Remarked the sprightly dame with the magid wand, who, | 2 moron!) parlor tricks, including the ~% BREAKFAST | IS Tao EARLY \ aes “ ) frown slangy tn her old age, ‘ Alas ' Three months later the young man in the case " With a woman five years older than himself Whose attractions included false teeth, an enamel cr to crack, twenty pounds too much of frure And the debts of her “impromptu” trousseau She had known the clopement was coming for only six 1 And had stalled it off until she found just the hat she wanted— ment should always start with the right hat \ mylexion guaranteed not ’ Even an elope | “You old fr wid the Girl Who Stayed fome, Yes, the irreverence of the younger | was much excited "You old freak, Why didn’t you swat That Woman with Wh do you get that T guess it's ersatz magic You make me SICK!" Humbly the Fairy Godmother hung her bead “T did "she pleaded “But why didn’t you tell me your riv What can between sobs, to her Fairy Godmothem- neration ia shocking, but the poor ohtid 4 ! if \ Gladys WE'LL why didn’t you stop them? your wand? \ HAVE TO CHANGE Nee | THE HOURS oF < MEALS ON NR a about? one of those just-as-sood sawdust substitutes my bes l was a widow? genit, witches, warlocks, trolls, pixies, gnomes, spirits of the aff, enchanters, browntes, a fairy godmother and her wand, or even Patience Worth and her oulja board ‘poetry’ accomplish ' Against « WIDOW? i t a darned thing! Don't you know that in Great Britain the war widows are making it a peace WITH annexations m Of all the returned heroes? That scores of war widows have remarried three times during the lust five ’ 8. ¢*. | And some of them FOUR times, t n the of the terrific competition obtaining million more women than men? As to why the widow always wins, there are many reasons— Because nobody gives a job to a greenhorn when be can get an experienced ha Beca every widow who remarries in a country with over a and optimigts ts an incurable optimist, Don't BE HASTY! aw. lh Le FIXIT tt one must obey the laws to find) tinuity between the dead and the liv- | $@ easy, but I say it Is possible, and) munion across what has scemed to Y have conversed with them as | be a gulf can be set Roins in respons. ue converse with any one in this| po?) Meera ta Oh pitemnance dience no hat as Diqtima told Socrates, “Being scientific men they have| {Oat om Git 4) chasm?” | given proof that it is real, not an - Shypersonation, not something em ating from myself, They have | blight a woman's life?" A ac as The Jarr Family — "2sicre? iow. wae ith all the strength of convic | panera sie Lae ; ‘ that I can er—that it is so that “It's his family put him up to it, apa permet th sople ill take B y Roy L. McCardell said Mrs, Jarr. “He's just as fond a interest “in. th things that | Copyright, 1920, by The M'ress Publishing Co, (The New York Evewing World) of his rs und mother as he ever Bing on; that they still help us ¢ “ ; 2 | Waa. Poor Luella ys he always new more about things than we a , v2) talking about them und they insist on rea tint they are able trom time | {Mr. Jarr Arrives at a Psycho-Analytical Conclusions | coming to the iyouse ad preter thes time to com An Americ r as to What Every Woman Wants. {are fond of her he wants to move jaway to get rid of them o& Greentield, N. Oliver ¢ | And what else?” asked Mr dare, Tjodge in August, 191 blow i He won't give up his bowling ‘was about ty fall, Withi hig¢¢] WAS downtown exchanging and very handsomo | club, either,” said Mrs. ae And Ye learned of the death of his gal- ane hollday. ‘pron Mops. ie Roes to stag parties and wants to Tant youn! on, Raymond, in bat- Te BG era eae ate aS between the gnes a girl likes | have his friends come to the house the near Ypr on after that, in va ans ae be that do not toe the matrimonial |and play cards every Saturday eve- many % th more than ‘one! What's-Ier-Name to-day. She's got- | « and the one doesn't care | ning.” modinr mself an wtully stout.’ f does—the si ler gets} "And she won't stand for th miembe s family, accordin t vant ine | te giv?” asked Mr, Jarr family and the old friends thing? dis dotailed anal frank story, Bi a <a ase Not exactly that, d Mrs. Jarr, in | usked Mr, Ja with the dead boy terestin uid Mr Jarr as he ree) 4 hesitating manner, “but why should would? WI Ho offered at least one proof of his | Liev “ bund eC) a irl waste t of her life iit Sdentity o which | Maeterlinok — and| you conveyed my condolence watil she shelf, with young thing others have conceded to be most dif-| iggy, sho was always an men whose intentions are not seri Lied Mr ficult of explanation by the usual 5 ou 4 Mir. Ja ———_ a favorite with me. I see!" said Mr, Jarr, “And | ‘er 0 many ladies are especial fa-] what is the cause of ler grief, now | husband likes a Do vorites with you! 1 Mrs, Jarr,| that she has the man that meant busi- | got it ou 4 ness? (ls if it isn't 1 for him, of : UE TI orager: yo ie Oh, everything!” replied Mrs, Jare. | course!” replicd Mes. Jane Know I'm talking about! What isn’t it that a man won't do tol And who knows bett a wif Ws “Indeed L do!" Mr. Jarre bed zy as Mrs. What's-Her-Name! We met | = Sorin a ad nweerceonte Cee TALKS ON HEALTH AND BEAUTY — (Tue New ening Wo ‘ Jot last September, she was in com are Ubi al + 4 On what continent are rabbits |pany with Mrs, You-Know-Who-I- HY Reaiine bariend Dest? Mean, and wore @ very light, dark | “1 lef soap: ¢| Mean, a , voright, 1920, by The Preas Publishing Co. (The New York ky World.) 3. What elty is the chief soaport of | *'8M Ain ian ae India? | he ati eet | r > A 3. What was the name of Commo-| ‘Rat Tully wt aw guid Nature’s Warnings. gore Dewey's flagship at the Battle] “4 iB ae You know who I mean,| [TN spite of tho fact that I am con- |t0 Jive as we should live and uhat ws VE Manta? |the ‘girl that used to talk eo much stantly telling my readers through | Will continue to overeat and overwork 4. What great fort in Spain is com-| and went er over every fellow she my column that Iam not @ PhY- | which compels us to ha it trolled by the Eng |gaw! I do hopo she's settled down |gician and cannot and do not answer|” Many women who are abeso are 8. What ig the religion of the AF-| since she married! Her name ¢ capes medical questions, | really in the poorest kind of phy 0. Jme just ni condition, as superfiuo Jesh iN tk e What antinal of tho camel fom=| trac ene for ad-| T am nevertheless, /Sondition, (ax auporiuous Hoan IM a ig used as a beast of burden in| vice and would never follow it when | Desieged with them: \ind vet these very crenie will cone South Ame si nea to a (EO to her? Ob. yea t remem | While I cannot|tinue to eit more than What is the name applied to a] yo her name now—Luclla Magoogin! | See pam ara oe ea tduies mun Who is half Chinese and half iN know, she marricd young Mr, | advise you about a | need and indulge | white? int urance business?" cure for various * ee one eee 3%, From what State was most of “How is Bink?" asked Mr, mmon disorders, |js the woman who aa Lia his eae ana a4 7 1 can tell you of| vous indigestion and cured? ‘ nit know what to ma ne} se and|her thin and miserable. 9 What city was fhe, neat of 4 him. He isn't the least bit j BLE ea ney Santis go right on cat Confederate Government during Tivos, Aba me > pst vel 2 ene. PACHA | civil W ..| dare went on, L do be #4 glenic methods for! cng nur throu r 10, What mule mulilenalrs Ba aoe thing she says, they ; ie RR the prevention of|of natu strong warnings, until sh © y #iven a Pum fo 0) uRs ried sho could twist him aroun¢ yercol dob! to go to bec “11, From what large sea animal ts ony on her. Poor Lucila, she saya | timate cure, De Mamis tal hap tacneees al the meat beginning to be used quite 0” \ishes some of her old beaux] Nature notifies and warns us in} light dict Sarna! Mesier ye aseant | Would call on her now, just to see if it | many ways when we disregard ber,| I often wonder wh e| Be eae umn tive wouldn't stir bim up a bit, but 1 ju ‘Gus . ? {spend money for druxs tors, | player had the shest batting aver=|SUAGT nor, ‘Don't come to me with |2Nnd, if we continue to do 80, we arc nen a simple cure is within | age for tho past season 4 yur trout I told you you wouldn't | visited by aches and pains wh chi their own Dp but wake up ANSWERS TO SATURDAY'S ijn yappy with that man! usually bring us to terms and force|to the fact and t © according QUESTIONS. Whit did she marry th Irance |uy to try lo correct some condition | iv nN rule nd t ' ‘, Barah f Why he ASKED ud M sin Hy and to d tike ann , 1 I s, Ja The others were all right, som ne rood healt an nl 14 in Pacis (California); 10, 18th; 4J, of them were just lovely to hery and 1|, Wiht a shame that we have to belyou will dodge mat nmen es 12, Luther Burbank, wil say that they all sent her con- mad@jto suffer bafore we weally begin onders » always wins Because widows expect to flatter instead of to be flattered; stead of to be soothed; to listen, instead of talk Tecause they know how to cook; Because they have no flusions about man’s chivalry, industry, intellect or common honesty Yet are perfectly willing to TAKE him as they find him, to soothe, in- COHN / WE'LL HAVE To | / KEEP T ouR. Realizing that doubtless the Lord might have made a better husband, + fe. | But doubtiess He never did SSED SCHEDULE — | And the only way | know to make the world safe against widows is oe) Is for the world to revive the old, wise, beneficent custom of “Sullee a awe The Ancient and Honorable Ancestry of the Automobile By Charles E. Corwin Copyriant, 1 by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York bvening World.) LOPLIE who not yet middle {5 nothing in the appearance of the P sed remember the first appear- | Vehicle to lead the spectators to sup- ie aent upon wr | poe it to be propelled by steam, it makes no more noise than an ordinary But while the auto- | travelling carriage, nor is there any it 1s of ancient |@nnoyanco from steam or smoke. It ey 1s further asserted that it can ascend wu ‘ . hill with perfect ease and be man- as 1680 Sir Newto! on | tyed with the utmost facility and, | roads of America, mobile is and | The Office 7 a ers norable | proposed a carriage to be propelled by | nicety," By Bide Dudley — foal ath suing from a nozzle} But stage coach drivers objectedi:to! fare OG eee Pe these vehicles because they frightemed sa aorta; etd wir h r of the va nf their horses and taxpayers complained Jatter half of he Isaac rea vehicle, nt, 1920, by ng Co, Evening World During the Beene elgh- of the mage which they did the 5 : , Nit 1 teenth century several efforts to cone | roads. By about 1886 all these earlier. Miss Primm Is No Flirt, but the Boss Says aeoi enone eslcas carriages were made, | Horseless carriuges had found. their a ae way to the scrap heap, and the an- There Is a Reason. Tho modet of a steam wagon, bultt by| Cent supremacy. of the horae Be * © 4 Frenchman named Cugnot In 176%/ mained practically undisturbed unttt : i es \ stil) preserved in Paris, In 1803| the invention of the gas engine in? 66] SPE by the newspapers, from Miss Primm, "We met in the 14 SIL pres ved tn Paris, In 1802 | tie, prepared the wwy for the snodernt Vopple, the Shipping Clerk, | theatre by ehunce. Mr. Popple was | Richard Trevithick o ~| automobile some ten years later. } "not holding iy hand--he was merely | tang, made a steam carr! hich he iis : he turned from his sales |iooking at my ring, 1 never flirt in +5 vteond AS at hen thirty-two years! film theatres.” drove all the way to London, ninety | _ tied in Connecticut"e | "Where do you do yo rting miles distant - a ' ken, 1 hate an insult! 1 shall tell Mr a ieoGh daneaatin wo minutes n n Bobbie, the Office Boys! snooks and will stand for | Dublin devoted him 0 partocting) Rete | atures ita a steams bi Which was used to drive Of 9) ti 5 n't do that, kid," raid L carriage of his own construction, ptimism the Blond stenographer ened the dog This automobile was patented in 1y >: ate room and sald Sey ‘ Jou swore oft Joking peivaial soar, aid Huds ME | an paveral qundred ules’ of tll BV rerman jenn Irinwn, Private Secretary to 0 eS eh the ‘big Dublin coachmaker has at-| “Tipnut Mean ine Tanion Hows. “He hasn't broken his b did you do that?” he de- | tracted the attention of multitudes by The Now York Lvwning Work!) SHURE BEN orem oue tn war can save | DOA : Saediete the exhibiuon of a very hundxoin A Wise Man. elf,” said Popple, addressing Miss Not exactly,” replied the bo: and ingeniously constructed cart | P Dror WOU iba the worde | . WOls: Uat don't you even Bc ecinen See ines N Einperor in his night-cap, tt? ring wiley you k hint that Miss Primm flirts, Do you| having but three wheels and y way once remarked, canm eau?” by a gentleman sit within, at a A ; Porha mind suggested ‘ command half the respect of gn’ wane AR lal daly Yes sir puy,| Tate of not than eight or ten || sh - Hlgt Dune tog Wied to ee, tony ” sant | Mle AN NOU Te Or APO ce| Only. too often It ts not’ whade ushts on thought wa . he iia t b se ii Vaal tee alte each is but what he makes people ‘Must have been nutineg," cone | beeolcarnalsly Glad Myan we ho is that gets hia what ‘bo 1 Bolsbie ease either n vand r we What do you mean by that?" and cause the carriage to make ¢ feeling of being well dressed, ef nanded Miss Prinm ened the | Angle with much greater celerity than Hiooking "just s« notin a ene. ae “Hoe said your old Aunt Mes fof a @ couch drawn by a horse qan'do. | security ‘and poise that few other fa L nut” said Mins Tillie, Miss 1 d Any cen eran tnnde an he maker, it aid, tn bulldiny| thinws ape abla te beatew wa iriouxs She turned and fac gry exit another un boy r ned, Neres ale, All of us can see; few of us ean y b Dellegedt, |W Le yenetrate; a man of parts discounts you know, young man. | - ystem w mail coaches ists bay: PH is 7a 8 ha Tg that m t was a cultured la 4 The world is made up of appears p to the time she died 7 y, second veht was named the es sood, bad; ditt nt, indiffer- Bobble asked weriously, is Hancock built, other, which he We occusionally detect the knotty pppaea. named ¥ “ltimber beneath the smooth edge, Dut at ttle (Bookkeeper, "'t | j OPP the “Autopsy” and the “Automaton.” | it ig expecting too much to ask us to y Why can't we all resolve | OPPMA was a Roman woman, ephis last was the 1 uccessful of | divine smc timber beneath ‘® ce to cach other during 19202" | Her full name Voppwa Sa- ali and was used 4 resular stage | Knotty edy My iness!" ¢ 1 from Miss | bina. She lived in the first cene | route for nearly six months, carryIng |” Dress does not make the man, but lie. an you imagine M84) try AD, she was very beautiful, | in that no over t DASSEDKETS te frequently indicates content Primm being sweet to Hobbiew | | or dte Tangourous charins that destroy | and trayeling more than 4,900 miles, A man’s clothe lattling, speak, it oon 6 Cold iy Poppy. | men, And then of a sudden out] Meanwhile other inventors wero at ling, talking about him all the time, HAUL DO OB BURGE GS BNO It TO errs lopped. Popnien cas. if Ana’ were | Worm: tue mice esstul of whort) “Fe is a wise man who can make The other n t 1 way a ing behind | popped ore Met eae a | wa worthy inne his clothes suy the right thing, tom at a Di Ow conutey yt urvhage mv rement, young man!" | Spitfire, She had a penchant for froe | ConMrus Wy i = wid Miss Primm flimly, "E haven't ai tt iat i ae } SHE Bian es velar evoureeeny ADVERTISEMENT Hand, nether have 1 “sngried Rut to enrol Nora aie frit oad e Wen My Sister's Soft, White Hands Eettobble, what kind story are| death. And then she caught Nero's! steam carel : Housshiolt” Sige ‘ raking an 2 asked | wi nd ditto, oH she swung Hondor in y oft pity of the rougnentag. Mt ns , ut it lips if nf ( het f walt lishos and ‘ r ide ' \ Don ‘ tly ' er ‘ A pict eae } ade tin the n ple rast tr " 1 voppwa, | may ‘ alantl ht HOEK. Ronan. iies wpe hellret elocity 1 vou. Ung a presel he hy ugein” with x be eonside : ) ds. ey at per coll The edit) of the Guactte says, “Dhere tube at all drugisiats.

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