r - The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, February 6, 1912 die 33torID. ESTABLISHED BT JOSF.rit VV1.rT7.Kn. tTBblUbed Sally BtMl snanday by the It,,. Pal lishlng rompany, Noe. tt to I Park Row, Naw Tonu RALPH PVLIT7.ER. rrldnt, II rm Row. J. AWH'H HIw, Treasurer. l ark tliw. JOSEPH Pt'I.ITr.KR, Jr.. Secretary. Tar How. . - ,-M-ir nr -M-i-ii-ii-i-i-M-i-'rrn-irinri " Such Is Life! (T-tew isit. M TSe (Sw r i! tofvrtf n I TU N. Tori World.) By Maurice Ke Entered at tha Poet-Offlc at Nw Tort, fliwnneM.1" Mat'"-. una Rataa to Th Kvtnluglr BuUe.-i l. World far tha TJnlted Statee and Oaned. .On Tea mi 11.(0 er.a "Month fa f Bests nd " the vmiinni ra All Co'inirlo" In the International Potal Union. Ona Taar Tl On itnrh VOLUVI S3 XO. 18,431 II ( LCTTCU. ' 40 HEROES OF EVERY DAY. ffHBBl apparei.tly w.s no tfiouylit of hiMslf, I the woman to her feet, k i-potI lirr and elnspeil BU n.... - i ... ,,... .1. ..II, " '(M' VIVUV I" 111' ir l ll l l l . He raided 1 ' I ll'T id Ml arme On a rake of Im in the midat of t)ie roarinp Ninjrara currant, tU. ho had desperately tried and failed to fasten n rope about her, man and wife died 1racly in thu light of hundreds of people on the shore. The newspaper MMOWl from which the aUve lines are quoted Incribtl the tfagii loss of tlirco Jive in flic break of the Ico bridge at Niagara. Fulls. Foi simple dignity, si If-f-acrifico and bniTcry in t Ml faM of horriMe death the story i- unrivallel. The other man vim wai mi ii il because he earlier turned buck to help tho tSMMt i J ii man. Tl in inli an re not Soldiers with thr excitement and drunk- rni of w.ir upon then. They were no! adventurer! need t faeing I lev wci not lifeereri tfefaretl to rfseno. Thev Wore jie-l thr l iirtiy sightseer! CBUghl in a terrible plight with every excuse. for panic and - ramble of eudi for himself. Vi t tin i ihoered the btfheel MBngOt sslf for,etfulnesK anl calm, j Jfjii j dirl ..ii tliey could for Math other. They niad' a brave, hard" Itffil Tor I fe Then thev met death firmly, and, in tho MM of the feral ertd, with -ttper'i and Kiipreme devotion. Bitch stories nrn food to rend. They rMtore one'e pride in the eiJinary tnan. After all, on occasion he ean bold his own with the beruel J all time. May the simple nobility of these three denthn la imip remembered. c la AN EARLIER CHANCE FOR THE CHILDREN. IITI.D (lAKl)KMN(l paya lietter than any other known kind of cultivation. Tha earlier Uie work Iwjinp. aud the more gentle and encouraging the eare and pruning, tho firmer the twin and the finer the flower. The country would do well to look more ( lonely at this end of tho education problem. In 1910 rhe college of thla country received $53,000,000 in gift end bequests. Yet 4,000,000 children, about 00 per cent, of the ttiaSl between the age of four and aix, hero no chance whatever of early kindergarten training. Only in one State, Utah, ii the kinder gartou a recognised part of the echool lyttem. The National Kindergarten Ainociation of this city, by circular o.'.ling attention to facta like the above, by prize offered to kinder garten teachera for eeaaya on the veluo of kindergarten work, and by organized effort to get the matter before Stale Legiilaturee, ia doinir it beet to aronae interoet in the child at hii moat toachnbli' foini'nt. All sneOMa to the AaiociaUon. Kindergurtena ahould not be ) ft to private nr ohuntablo institution. A pnrt of the regular jebool Mile in, thejf ought to prove moat valuable. The tendemat ti.lnd ii the boat for lowing habile of observation, interest, industry nd rouaoieotiouauoaa. The bard unattractive neat of much primary Bci.oul work could be overcome and the work Itoelf made far more 0flactive by a gentle habit-forming introduction. When one oonsiden that hi some parta of the country children Cirage only three years in school, and that only about six ami one f per eent. of echool children go beyond tho high ichool, the value bt beginning early and skilfully tho work upon the child mind i only LUo plain. - THE EGG. M.1I1 tw . B A 3 A ! 1 uuo era muon servsa in ina aay a news juai now. i nev eotnc mostly boiled. They oonin mainly high. Whatever It costs, let us 1m grateful for the egg All tor to the hen that mye it. It ie the moot wonderful of all foods. It ie the safest, aimpleat. burnt, most healthful, most faithful, moat widely available artiel libit man ean put Into his stomach. In whatever corner of tho world MM finds one'a-self, however soiled the surroundings, however un Inrlting the inn, one can always count on tho egg. It is sure t romo at the call with its clean, wholesome, strengthening content nently protected from dirt and germs. Unlike other foods, the egg Is not n carrier of diFeane. Om over hears it blamed for infection. Milk may contain a hundred Sanger, bread may be unwholesome, but tho fresh ogg is a model of BiniUry aweetneee and antiaopticized purity. Xor can its contents fcc tampered with without deetroying its integrity and making plain an all Uio world its fall. Alone boiled, dropped, poncfied, aliirrod it offers itself nlwnv- witt confident assurance. It seeks no nid. Yet it is an admirable "mixer." It will lend itself with gentle Mil ingiutaa to almost any society. It improves and elevates what Mr company it enters. It strengthens the bowl of the invalid. It tempera the eup of the reveller. It has one of fho most beautiful shapes fn nature. Tts oval hjl t . the despair of artiste. Its surface is a joy to tho hand. Ne record or ancestry is more ancient and honorable. Yet it rffer- itBelf freely and impartially to rich and poor. Its price is not il fault. All glory to the egg. Whenever we meet her let n kn 0ff our b.its to the hen. -- LIONS AND LIMELIGHT. AMOVXKOPI0TUBI Aim showing a Uon hunt la Vfriee with the lion charging full tilt toward, the BM Uteri only to be nrnught down by a bullet In tbi nick of limo, wan siiown n? n private entertainment in this olty the other nigiit. Troni VariaUlM conicit the story of an Mterprlslog inoving-pielurc man vim arranged an open-sir act between lion uud u Imub, using a t il lion and a real lamb, but beeomlin? terrlfled at the goings-on of the lion, left the latter in ponseeidon of the field and the camera. The moving-picture film eeems likely to leave poor nature little privacy. Widespread publicity of doings in tho animal world will I mid be the rule. The jangle ought to put up strenuous fight be 0(tvfc It consents to fall In and lead thi investigated Ufo ( Xt FROM 5 I WO!HlP VoyU. T gapg. ' ' w ivj n i I. f i love Your V. HAIR r a I ADMIRE Vooft nARtVT ) I 7 iaoore Voosi.A tea 0OT6 OH Youft ) L9 1012. i., ii it raMMkk o, I in n. Tutu WalM), my A...fw Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland MR. JARR'S ONLY SON QUALIFIES AS A HERO. MAriTKU WILL lie J AHK knew full n li whex tha dmtlat'a waa. In fact, ho had been lad up to tha dour of 1 1 ) neighborhood molar ma cbanlc and bicuspid operator lome aev aral time. Eurarlcal. medical and dantal ethloa ara all the aame. RapresentaUvea of all theee profcealona dlraeUr or Indlraetlr ; advartlae to pull trada. but profeestonal pri.l.- prevent them from coining out and pullln in the faltering- and unwill ing at their door. Having rrfuaed to enter the dread por tal In the company of hi mother, Ha. tar Jarr, under tha dire and strlcteat command of hi father, had been cast forth from tha parantal flat with an ex plicit oider to return with the affeetad tooth in hln hnnd or never return at all. Mra. Jarr watched from behind the window curtain, wondering whether her brave hoy would be too brave to re turn home If he wain't brave enough to enter tho ilentlat' torturo chamber. M. .l.ii i had been determined to build up the child' physical and moral cour- asr by 1 1 1 1 - Spartan test. But It waa he whn hail euRaenteil. in a whlitpered alde to the fjn.l mother. tht the faithful OSTlrUdl ttOUl4 'll4rul herlf in Mr. DUSSBbairr'l olil gray sha-wl and ahadow the son an-1 holr of tho .larra to aee he did not. In desperation, run away to sea or West to kill Indian or become a drummer hoy ami be alaln In battle rather Ulan (SOS the terror and torment of getting a tooth pulled. Master Jarr. holding tight to tha dol lar bill to pay tho torturer, and sobbing heart-brokenly, crept alowly down tha street, while t'no ever faithful riertrude, who, like Mr. .Inrr, felt It was "n shame!" Iurkr.l and followed on the I othor bMSi I She WM Ja't alunit to cross over and kls tfi.y unhappy chll.l ami tiring him ; back homs In triumph with n de;lara I tlon that If the tooth mutt go so wo'ild I she, when a group of urr-hln. lel by I Mastsr Itavlnskx, sens Hying around the cornel'. ISSaUlttna Master (lussle I Hepler, thn butcher's overgrown and ! aomaWhSt f. .'llmln!wl son. with stick". I Tlila, In JtlVsallS circles, li itilled i "Ptaylag Pollesmao." "Htjr, BUI i wl.ere yuh goln"" cried Master Hurler, lultlnK In hi illzht. "Hen g..l a dOltarl" cried Mia. or Mavlagky, who, threuali some trang Sort ut sec ond sight, SOUM see through Maatar Jan's closed flt. i in Ti.i.-t:nK his voimtt pUyfcllows, Master Jarr dri w himself erect. All trace, of r'ln anil fear had vanished. "I'm Runiiii Ket Bub tooth pulled out!" he said proudly. In an Instant riay.ng roucaman &3 m Ounrni.t iuu t Tha Vtmt MaMaSf . (Tb N.n Tutk Wutlil). " Matrimonial Number." (hi! at enry man's opinion, thu vital Wtft ihuuld 6 lufn a thiny of duly anil a tuy forever. eWWl-ANB R'nen a man marries nouadapi It Is usually eithit fteoOHSS fta hat met ioma woman vno hat WTitA him of Mtsaaf or ireMew ifko I triiitii; Ie ci htm oi thmi. It f-ums In be bci DHtlnP ninrcsnd more the fud for its to burn our Any. is tilth thr (Milne firr hy tprimntng uilh matrimony, bur fhu.i Jar nobody from Hrioham Young to Ferdinand I'lnney Karle has disco rered any Dalit factory tubttltutv for plain, every day, old fathionnl mON00sa- "fir oi asenlsM etother aeei to nmkv." It Hit average man IPSSiM tludy ornithology peihapt he uoutd nut be so thoiked and hurt when he marries a flaunting BeflC0Cl and the ails to tetlle down into a modett, cooing, little dove. . Diana, the "virgin goddett,'' probably remained an old maid because she alwayt followed tha cnass instead of leading it, and hunted with a horn instead of with a snare. When a gvats ii idou) ttnnirres she in apt to ilisi over that a ehangc of hutbandt, like a elinnge of flats or boardina houtet, merely meant getting used to a new set of ineonvenienees and troubles. The real hero of modern life is the man who goes right on pretending to be happy uith a wife tt-Ao hasn't any sense of humor. tention en tat later eating their tribe. "Doss It urtt" tbay aatks "Naw!" mm Meaner Jarr. "It would hurt anybody alas bat but I laugh at IL Aavjrbody got candy? TU at candy. That 'a lasers I ears far ht ad tooth V Nobody had any candy. Nebsdy tha wherewithal to purchase eaady. "Why den't you buy eaady and tt, atloky eaady ilka Jawbraakaraf hard candy Ilka 'All Day asked Maatar Issy Stavlaaky. "Ten a dollar. Buy a lot of candy sad ua all." Master Jarr affected great Indlfl eru-e "Candv'a for Wds." ha amid. Ts going to ehsw terbackar. Anyway," la1ded. "I got to go to the doatkat'i llaw' I ain't afraid of him. like yew I lers 'ud be!" I "Betchar ara! Betehar araf cried his idear playmates, atlcklng thalr tonanaa out at the courageoua lad, and making derlalve and, alaa. even vulgar geatur A twitch of excruciating pain Master Jarr about thla time, bat a stiffened up Ilka a aoldlar and amUad ilka a atolc. If It was hurting you fallara 11k It hurts me now, you'd be acreasnln' SV runnln' home." he said proudly. "I'M betehar hollered when you waa homel" sneered Maatcr Stavlnaky. "And run cryin" to your muddar," aald Mnatar Ouaale Bepler. Ha might have added that auoh waa hi own proco.lure upon all pnlnful ocaa- Islnns except when ho ran from hia mother to esravpe them, t "Aw! He's a flb! He ain't got I toothache!" cried Master Slavlnsky. the akeptts. "Ain't 1? Look at It:" Anl Master Jarr opened his mouth and pulled the right hand corner doarn and away with his forefinger to dis close the horrific cavity In ths second maxillary molar. "You're afraid to let me stick a pin In It!" said Master Johnny RaJiglo, the boy demon. "Yea. Yes' He's afraid!" oiled the other dear little Zulua. Master Jarr atood firm and proud. "(Jo ahead," he aald calmly, "I kin stand it!" "You'd be afraid to let ma pull It With pinchers my papa'a got In lils shop, and give me tha dollar," aald Master Blar- llnsky. But the pure oomm. r. '.illam of Shu proposition was repugnant to tha rest. ua torgOttea, and the yuuiiK savatTSSiaad Maater iiangie autrgeaieu mey pun of elvUlSatlen had centred all their at- the tooth but share the dollar. iBWIeB sa NewewMeiivaa Fables of Everyday Folks Sv Sophie Irene Loeb - awasjass aiasajasaass aasaas asSSaaaajiaaS1 A marriage of convenience is the safety-pin with u hi h u kTOMON fasten on her pride when the hooks of love are lost. Schooldays ggg 4 falgaar) By Dwig once opoh a tifne Tvtst iwai afaaio Ta 0o elosne . S Mf LAIO POWH lei IHC ,ni ib aireP tc suh cmc out AnO SZ. La- Came A ak-iPea ,7- TrtS-SHI Ha WAV A rw (lirlO hW MS u M0 Tn( SV IV i w 1 tAUlT SC A PRoMt wnr HOMt A. MO MS , y - I " rAhWiaouiM nc .r& . i t c,uni v A. rfPlblb ioceMT . v -JT XSaTJav a TtTfN I I -aSaWjaVl V C-.rlght ISUi bf Tli. I THE "GOOD FELLOW." ONCE Upon a time thsrs was a go'l fellow. There arc varloua klniis af od fellows. Yet a real good fellow 8 one who never mliaes an opportunity to he on. Neither does he have to prove It. However, a good re How does not al ways get the I1K8T of It. Many time a good fel low I the host that is FOltOOT TKN the morning after. This Rood fellow which Is one thing ISUSlly sure of. Hut 44 SOPHIC iRtNC ha.l many fi lends. a good fcllu, Is there uru vurlous standards of frlend- blp. This nan WM the good ohl HEM AlU.i: kind. Itc could be called upon In time of PROULBMI as w ell as of I I'l.KAHl'K!-: ami not bo found wantlnif. A bora a!l the good fellow had a rever ence for his mother's sex. And, wher ever he roiil. 1. as PROVED It. One nf his Dreads In that direction waa worded by ona Kipling and went some thing like this: ' And the brand of the dos 1 upon htm by whom I the asorsl revealed. If she hath written I letter, delay not an lastsat, but burn tt; Tear It to ploee. O fool, tl.at the wind to Its mate may return It. If there ho prOlfblS hei-ward and a lie of the blackest can clear, j Lie while ihy lips can move, or a man I alive to hear." Now, Btranue to ay, the same man 'who wro'e thone words later wrote i "The Female of the Species Is More Deadly Tain the Male." But the good ration "i iy believed the noon thing. f-v. It e.ima to p ish 111 the everyday oi - ie oi e.ents that, with his jovial j go idnsSS, having heen graOtaUS to aev laral woman, tic met ONI to whom he ! waa Ml IRE grs lous She KN'KW he was a good fellow and i ; ire pted all his grsclousnaag aci'ord. I in tut, Bul i am sony to say, as It occasionally hsppens, sha did manv ! t! Inns ofttlmas IScradltSd ta women !n I mnVtng hint b!eve that he was the j fn- -"!' f. '.low on earth. N iWi th rs I HUltS difference be ,ti i helpg a QOOD fellow and being the BEIT f.llow Welng worthy him self, he fudged oihcrs a.-cor.l'ngly and trleil to Hva up to lifliig the best fr-llnw. He TRUgTBO hi r. ' An! was not the least what the kuly mean'., mit a 'good fellow' must follow hU natural hent" which h did. He told her nviny thing many beauti ful things. 0os aecaptsd AIU rukUahini en. (The Nrw Tork World), But as I no unusual circumstance, the lady met ANOTHBK good fallow In fact, a better fellow (she thought), and he too wa made -to believe HE was the beat fellow. So it happened that the first good fal low waa left out of It, aa It wars. He did not know WHY. Ha thought HE was ait fault. For he did not believe that thing about . the "female of U I species." j By aeveral colncldencea. to make a ' long etory ahort. tha first good fallow saw himself SUPPLANTED by the i.t)n-r good fallow. Ha accepted tt: which was also his natural bant, and ! held to his creed. Vet by aome mora colncldencea, tiie aecond good fellow auw the altuatktn. He too accepted It. The lady on the other hand would NOT accept. She returned to the flrat and wanted to make him aee that ha was the bast fellow. But- even a goad fellow has feelings and, like tka warm. will turn. He took hla medlotne. and waa not em- kind to the lady. No, ha did not faith In tha acx; but ha SAW hln aa one woman aaw him a good felloa for the TIME TTOtNO. He reflected. MORAL: EVEN A GOOD TBULOV OBJKOTH Tv COMING IN LIKE UON AND OOINO OUT LIKE SHORN LAMB! "The Qreat Within." Pv Com M. W. Oreenieaf. WHEN emergencies axkta and don't know What to go. It la often with aurprlaa discover something naw In ourselves; some unknown trait WSU awaken and come to Ufa. When necessity l great Spportuattlas are rife. There are depths within aaoh heart fathomej and unknown. For we only use a part of the wealth all our own. Self-limited and Mind, content droas and chaff, With dull, aomnolent mfnd, wa wake to half Our ability and atrength, Ood-glv our birth, And ne'er know the detti and of our heritage on earth. "Occaalon makee tha mln?" God hmi years before; And on that aame tiroad plan Ha ma countless thousands mora. He gave us strength and power for like deex!a and bold, But we waste away our hour unUI night falls cold. Oh, dullards! Nona ara base. Leak Shi within and sea The Image of His face, thins tors' eternity. 1 i