The evening world. Newspaper, May 1, 1913, Page 22

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The Evenin VATABLISHHD BY JOSHPH PULITZER. t Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Noa, 58 to Bacept BONN Now. New York, ALPH PULITZDR, President, 63 Park Row. RN ANOLS aA. % Published Daily J. ‘reasurer, 63 Park Row, Josip PULY Becretary, @ Park Row, w ™ et New York Y panier batt.” i Ne fovening For Ei ‘World for the United States and Canada. ; + $3.80] One Tear... - dt Speed :20| One Month. MAKE THE OWNER RESPONSIBLE. = HE latest automobile collision hereabouts, in which eight men : : ‘and women were hurt, reveals the eame old situation: At least % one of the chauffeurs was entertmining a midnight party of | this own in his employer's car, “which he had no permission to use.” ~@ This phrase is far too common in automobile accidents, particularly , in those that oocur at night. Is there no way in which owners of cars can be made to look efter them and restrict this “use without | permission”? A man who ownse big automobile has a grave responsi- Pity in leaving such « powerful engine of destruction in the hands “of @ young and, perhaps, easily tempted driver. He should keep a earefuil check on the movements of both. How many of these wild automobite crashes in the email hours of the night coud be averted and if owners took more precautions against the surreptitious use of their | care when they are away or in bed? Sy ‘Whether he is in the cer at the time or not, make the man who | owns it responsible for the damage ft does. It is often more danger > ous without him than with him. Make the owner answereble at all Pa WANTED: BEAUTIFUL WOMEN FOR SUFFRAGETTE | PAGEANT APPLY SUFFRAGETTE HEADQUARTERS ond-Clans Matter, aivand the Continent and All Countries in the International Postal Union. vee 09.78 86 YOu ARE Lorin FoR ReAu raed eae PAGEANT 2 WELCOME HOME! RETURNING CITIZEN of this country landed from the Olympic yesterday morning end cheerfully spread his ward- robe over the pier for the extisfaction end profit of the ! Congress ¢s not ftkely ¢o-tavestignte the alleged Beecball Trust this session —Dews Item. \ Mf Ty Cobb to-content, we guese-qe-can wosny slong. SS eee ‘*Life Is a Habit’? @ BLIGR, the famous scientist, in em) There are those of us who INSIST on address at Yale gave his dictum | living in the past only, I iknow e little tor Hving ae follows: ‘woman who hee shut out all that is “My method 1s/ane ‘sunny and happy of to-day by the freshest, ol | dreaming and dwelling on the events of xt, simplest and | YOSTDRDAY. ie 4 usefulest. Forget] Memorial wreaths under| glass cases ae are all around her stuffy little parlor; GETTING HOME. Nib time I went with a new coa- s cern,” explained the cloak and mine that day. Bright eyes are the ‘ding. “The control of the-mind, as @ work- ing machine, t the end of all education. This can be accomplished with delib- eration. ‘The most striking thing about Amer- fea te fe hurry, Wuropeans accomplieh Just ee much without the everlasting rush.” ePbcer or 6 pint of something costiter have « share in emoothing out Whe tangle an brightening the fature? Axil even 00, does the result each conduct as the bench eilvied? Ma, Bryan hes fast settled & that metlowing drinks with meals (ame mo good oven tn diplommay. How dare Justice Giegerich pre- enibe then os apreventive of divorce? i y a fice TEET Bren the-Ay-Fighters cantt cocape the question thet apiits af Got out to Kansas City the firm blew UD and left me stranded. As I stood in front of the hotel with only two dollars fn my teather, I debated whether I would spend it on one dinner or make that eum do for ten free lunch hand- In ether words, he goes on the theory that yesterday is dead and to-morrow ever comes, while to-day is VER PRESENT. Bome of his points, @rastic, are well taken, While we cannot entirely FORGHT the past, since tt has helped to make what we “and it is wise indeed sometimos to REIWUEXT on it and profit while @ little "Yomi are the man T aim looking for,” @aid he. “The chauffeurs outshere wen't leave town.” ult salesmen, “and when 1 thereby in poignant instances; yet, in the main, the philosopher's idea is not to ‘the tri “Then he took me into the hotel for dinner and put the proposition to me: ‘Three months In the East at ninety dollars a month and found.’ WING needs of the present and | not have the price of the ticket back to the making of the future, ‘New York, his proposition looked good “HAVE BE HAIRe~ YA Pp OWL (2m ee.) PARTID, If this wou.an—net unlike many others OOOO POP LL PL PLL PIPPI PLL LL DEL PL EDR LLLP LLPLDLEP DLL OPREOR The Man on the Road Dy & T. Battin, Coprright, 1018, by The Vree Publish ing Cv, (The New York Krening World), to me. Mut let me tell you I had to do some tall ‘studying for two days learn- Ing how ¢o run the machine. ‘When I took hold of the wheel 1 broke the speed clutch. the former driver had been # drinker, 0 I waa able to blame it on him. ‘Th T ran into @ fence and touk eff # lot of also was blamed on the After that I burst a tire by Funming (nto the ourb during the trial spin alone, I put it into the case and put on the new tire. “My two dollara bought gogsles and a linen Guster,/ eo that, with « littte nerve, I landed home with money in the kick. ‘The boas took a ‘shine’ to me and took jw ngland for an extra spin. This got me another month's ‘When he went home he could not understand why J refused to ge beck to Kansas City with him.” “Did you ever see him again?’ asked one of the knights of the arip. “Sure. The next trip out 1 sold him a bil] of hardware for his broom factory out there. He wae delighted at my rise from the apeed-clutch to the grip, he me up through 3 Day. wate”? UTIFUL AUBURN BE GRAV € the piano is closed and the pictures on j—Wwould but relegate her fune: the walls are draped in mourning. You SHRINK from entering this at- mosphere and eesing her. For she is always sighing and telling you that everything worth while hae long DE- U CAN'T HELP IT IF YOU ARE TOO FAT _ DON'T BLAME ME Ho_WILL CARE whe THE BABIES might learn to realize that to Made thoroughly WORTH ‘Then indeed would her sad sighs turn info glad songs and she wo working machine, And you and | and all of manipulate that machine so as to live Indeed, tt 18 in the immediate present. all “habit.” If we persist in letting the that would otherwise come to hampered, Fortunately, | *ltoxether. fn and take care of the future 19 thus PROVIDED for As to Osler's criticiam that too much and that the mind” is better ‘DELABERA TION. in truth, hei y, with the resultant wear all around us. And ft ts also oriticiem of “TOO MUCH HU We go on the theory that deserves another, little ¢ harmful consequences in th on their hurry-nerves and qu the point of more feliherate tive reaction, - ROMANTIC AN’ SENTIMENTAL - HE MUST BE LEAN scsi NC By Sophie Irene Loeb wished, day is a ‘breathing, living RBALITY and can be Treason to look FORWARD instead of BACKWARD, Just as Osler says, it is all in the “control of the mind,” as @ the past interfere with the POSSI HKIId- TIES of the prexent, many good things stilted and very often lost And it is safe to say that If youttve present the | ‘ontrol of the accomplished with secret of the blunders of the every- | of the human machinery that Is evident we Americans do infeed deserve the It 4# the wise ones who put the halt etructive action rather than to destruc: ‘Thus, if we hurry lees in the present, to-morrow finds energy unabated and she WHILE. uld have us may pains of we hurry re he has | and tear true that RRY.” one mad realizing he end, t them to and con- | plans by the schemes of off ¢ World Daily Magazine, Thursday, May 1, 1913 By Maurice Ketten 41M iY 3 5 apse! EN. ore'CiVIL WAR BY MRS.GEN. PICKETT. Coprright, 1918, ty The Prem Publishing Os. (The New York Brening Wel. GEN. W. W. LORING, Confederate Hero of an Egyptian War. Jom of Abyssinia dive's army from that is pecullar to himself. “Noticing an Egyptian charm which He went on to tel me the story of things of site. had two arms and had supposed that that I could do ft atill extent. It was better that Gen. Pickett have hin with me, even not selfish with laurels.” ‘Nor with anything else, General. vent girl when you were in Georgetown “I could not have done less. Inge, to me tn after y: rs, the youth on the wall jn battle array.” How distinguished a scholar young be known. in which the unusually long hovering of three years. Was promoted to major and received two higher brevets for courage, serving afterward in command of hie regiment. In 189 he marched his regiment three thousand miles, from Texas to Oregon, to help settle the boundary dispute with Great Britain. bee In 1851, as leutenant-colonel, he was ordered back to the Rio Grande and chased Indians for five years, In 1956 he was colonel and in 188 served in the Mormon war under Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, After a year of travel in Europe, Egypt and the Holy Land he was aasigned to the command of the Department of New Mexico, and in 1861 resigned to Join the Confederacy. He was a Union man and strongly opposed to secession, but followed his State, was appointed brigadier-general, and was the only Confederate leader to attain success in West Virginia, As major-general he was in all the cam- pains of Georgia, Mississippi and Ten- ne of reminiscences. Plenty of Time. SCOTOH minister was walking through & A street in the village one misty evening when he fell into a deep hole, Lond ne ladder by which he could make his esc: Sad bo toga to dina’ tor help, A passing laborer fheard his cries, and, looking down, sald who he wes, The minister told him, whereupon the laborer remarked “Wed, weel, ye necina kick up sic @ noise, You'll no be needed afore Sawbath, an’ this te oniy Wednesday nicht."’—acies’ Home Journal, ate Imaginary Insomnia. RAND WHITIOOR, who is writing stories B ‘and books when he ix not masoring and re forming, hates with all the vindictiveness that Jn im his heart, clocks that strike the hour and throw out on the silvery air of might their ell-Itke chimes ‘One evening he went to Columbus and put up ‘et a hotel near @ church tower, which was some ro | weady. \ tower when {t came to chiming, Brand got into = re { onteitins, | @ rt) r)] By Ferd G. Long ole WAVE A CAPACITY FOR MAKING “Ismail ie an ambitious chap,” fall the shrewdness that belongs to his Peypto- wear the Eye of Horus,” calling my attention to the strength, which he wore on his own breast. T replied.. “Gen. Alexander sent It for me in a letter to Gen. Pickett “If Plekett had @one you would have had th was and fine as the experience would have been. you, and he would not have consented to leave you. T should have been glad to ough he would Have outranked me, The Day’s Good Stories ORING PASHA returned from Eeypt with his mae L tlal honors heaped upon him even more thfokly then when he left his native land. said then that he hed no room for a single teurel leaf mere. He had held the highest command tn the Beyptian army. And when tn the disastrous expedition against King Ana I should have & Circassian officer of more personel fascination than olther courage or military okit hed through official manoeuvring been put tn eommand and led that magnificently organised army into what would have ween irretrievable disaster, Loring Pasha had rushed ‘into the situation with the American common sense devel ‘oped in Southern glades, on Western plains, in Mexico and on the felds of the Confederacy, and he saved the K utter destruction, said Loring Pasha, “with Circassian origin, besides much But he lets his mind be diverted trom ‘hie well-laid ctaldom and the capricious blowing of harem winds.” I wore, he said: “I see that you, too, Utchat, the emblem of its origin in mythologic ages, and Plained Its effect in bringing to ite wearer health, vigor, power and all the good * other badges, for he would # have been a Pasha and maybe ruler of Weypt, The Khedive was greatly aise epyointed when he saw that T had short hair and only one arm. The General had been pictured to him with iong and he had taken ft for granted that T was as well provided for. “TL told him that my hatr might Ne remedied, becatse tt could grow, but that { feared my arm was at alstandstil and would never grow again dess, 1 had fought through many wans with short hair and one arm and thougyt Which information seemed to console him to some. Noverthes did not accept Ismatl'a offer, fine as it For he could not have taken ‘Tou see, I am The first time I remember of hearing of you was when someone told me of your self-sacrificing efforts to save a con- College." I found out that those two deluded young Deople, @ oollege boy and a convent girl, had planned to elope, and I knew that they would be married and uve miserably ever after. youth on the convent wall, and we had a@ pitched battle and both fell off and were too seriously wounded to take any further interest in romanue proceed “Unless those two people were most ungrateful, they must have felt thankful For the’ girl married an ofMcer of high rank and com- mendable character and had a happy Iife. and had a domestic fe of great contentment. “It eeemed that I could not keep out of a fight in any circumstances that could exist, At fourteen I ran away from home to fight Indians, and at sixteen was @ lieutenant; eo that I had the advantage of being a veteran when I met And the boy became a noted officer Loring might have become ean never For the Texan war for independence gave him an opportunity of indulging in his favorite recreation, and the college walls son missed their inartial inmate. At twenty-one he was a member of the Florida Legislature, the dove of peace enabled him to spend This time the Mexican war interrupted his quiet pursuits and he was ap- pointed captain in the Mounted Rifles, leading Gen. Scott's charging column at Mexico City, where he was wounded and his arm amputated on the fleld, He nessee and held an important place in the great battles from Vicksburg ty Atlanta, surrendering with Gen. Joe Johnston Upon returning from his service with the Exyptlan army he published his book, “A Confederate Soldier in Egypt." bed, aud after tom thme, heart the by ly about for a long trike | his brain was toes the human race and ne groaned Whitlock, with ideas for uplift ‘money away from pr “1 power ‘Three o'clock struck. “Insomnia! wailed Brand, “I'm going matt He aprang out of bed, tuned on the light ant Tooked at hie watch. \ Tt wee @ quarter to 1 o'clonk in the inorninis, and his agile brain had changed the quarters chimes into hur bella.--Pornlar Magazine, HE report of @ disturbance in Parkursbungy, alg last Munday evening wae exaggerate !, ‘The Philosopher went over, inquired inti Mt and found: “J “Bay yeminy, jung fallor nem Yim vat mac en Bekhart hae say hae call om hes ft "bout What aif he do thent* The Maid’s Burden. lee HERE have you tem, Mary ant” “10 the He was returning home, be eal, @ few i; | before, and pemed @t, P: Cr So I intercepted the * At his death he left an incomplete , Third Question Unnecessary.* ; 4 ixty-fuy mennits after saven dae alap + detiene 1" us 2 4

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