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Gee! 1 wish 1HAD AN AUTER MOBEE ’ 4 ‘“*S’Matter, Pop?’’ : No-o- You ARE Too LITTLE TO The Evening World Daily Magazine, Shen ‘4 Conpright 1012, by Che PRR 1) lAw TBE GENEROUS! seb LET HIM RUN IT ' PRAT AR RAR A AMAR CIT ee ans Be ae Prem Publishing OO. (The Ne Now Just FoR | YHAT, ALKALI IKE i} | CAN HAVE THE (MACHINE ALL Nad HIM SELF Men of Initiative | Modern Americans Who Have Led the March of Progress | | Comnigtt, 1018, by Be Prem Publuhing Co, (The Now York Brening World), | FELIX ADLER, Propounder of Educatioial Eugenics. | HEN one undertakes to write about a prophet of a great eocial revolu-| and morality, he must etudy his man with care The first fact to! establish | sincerity; the second {s hie capacity leader and} his thorough acquaintance with the eocial weaknesses to be reformed. | Felix Adler suMces to convince any thoughtful man or woman of his unfalter-| ing sincerity. “Sincerity” ta one of the truly great words im the language. It fe what binds together men who achieve results. It ts» the cornerstone of Dr. a4 irrevoonbly, but we cannot for a moment doubt the mant As the creator and bullder of the Society of Ethical Culture, Dr. Adler has| mapped out the work of a lifetime. The motto of thie structure might well be Block front upon Central Park West. Ite wording would “Morals and Character are indivisible.” This cardinal doctrine never grows obscure in the| Bands of such a mi He preseata demonstrations cut with a hundred He was among the earliest the greedy money-grabbers who for generation have been gathering unto themselves the product of labur in thie country. He was the firat forceful man to shout: “No extenuation of | of the phrase, “Long Range Sinners,” to describe @ board of raliroad directore that kill men because they will not Install safety devices! Money that should Be for betterments of the permanent way. to provide steel cars, or te rebuild ate” loans, .Bvery, little while “a melon” ts cut for the privileged few, who have temporarily loaded up with the stock on their “inside information.” For twenty years Dr. Adler has been conaistently denouncing the financial vultures @taples, food and clothing. Nobody has called him @ “muckraker!” teinforced by courage. By Julius Chambers tion, the basis of which is higher life, created by education, eugenica | To alt, even for a fow times, under the remarkably inctsive diction ef Dr. | Adler'a unquestionabdle popularity. At times we must differ with him, mails) @et tn letters of gold upon the facade of the splendid building that occupies a facets; his arguments literally, vibrate with proofs that force conviction. orimes against the publi Again, he was inventor ‘weak bridges, goes into the pockets of favored officera who have been steadily increasing the cost of living by “cornering” the Hevea in keeping in the current of universal life Ne aeceticiam He has spoken with knowledg Hie ethical atandard, as I gather from eeveral interviews extending ever years and from a recent discourse to which I lstened, ts that Man must not be rated by what he actually has done, BUT BY WHAT HE MAY DO—is capable of doing! Although a critic of orthodox religion, he ie most appre- ative of the ethical enthusiasm and power of the Christian Church. He ts not an tconoclaat! For example, regarding divorce he opposes it, for any cause! In this stand, theology has no part; Dr. Adler merely believes; that the relation of marriage, once established, should be permanent—tirre evable, This necessarily implies a revision of existing views concerning the Jaws of Mowes and violations of the Seventh Commandment. Dr, Adler gould gubstitute legal separation, without right of re-marriage, His argument is frem the viewpoint of eocial welfare. “Simpler lives al led,” he says. He ta @ socialist in ethics, The etrong, the educated should give thelr lives to the weak and the unlettered! Se weak never should stand alone. Like most men of Initiative, Dr, Adler goes further in some directions than people of to-day are Inclined to follow, 1s an exponent of what he descriine ae “Vocational Democracy.” Te advances the idea—and I do not know that| the doctrine haw advanced beyond that atace—that, in a democracy, society | ahould be represented not merely by men as citizens but as farmers, merohants, physiclans, and so on, It sounds impracticable, even undesirable, on the ac- cepted basis of manhood suffrage, When I ral ao, Dr, Adler asked If I be- Heved in the advent of woman suffrage, Answering tn the affirmative, the doctor met me with a prompt declaration of disbelief in the wisdom of giving the franchise to women! 1 was confured and disappointed. The beat reason | he gave for confirmed opposition waa that it ia “correct in theory but un-} destrabie in practice, | Dr, Adler was born at @ village on the Rhin | in 1851, and five years later wee age with a whole wor!d of beauties vying with each other for the coveted golden apple? Coygright, 1911-1912, by Doubleday, Page Co. ITHOUT knowing It, old Bil Bascom had the honor of be- ing overtaken by fate the Parted, being unable to withstand the tire of fun and practical Jokes of which pMicio, the legitimate targ: 1918, by The Bree Poa co, { om, Mew Tore Brenig How would you choose between the statuesque blonde and cuddling | golden apple, Seog oe 7 Oe O, Paris of mythology, who thought you had such a dificult task be-) tiny “doll,” the Titian crowned and raven headed, generous curves or sylph- | the knet fore you to choose between three beauties, what would you do in this| like slenderncss? Every Bob who chooses a bride is a Paris in his own world, and some-| this poaition 1 times I think that the reason why a Bob stays bachelor forever is that he cannot decide the dimeult The Marquis and Miss Sally » the Story of a composure, even turning angrily with d reaching for his siddie Monda By Eleanor Schorer CS Lag cetatsie tt oath aba asokalasocantel question of which Bens of 1918 mont merits the! worne, We have all learned by experience ¢ West Texas Cattle Ranch somebody k ‘ September 15 1913 Em vf Bel v4 By C. M. Payne a » | Now WHAT GONNA DO” Sal MACHINE 1S GONE You Can Be Your Own Beauty Doctor. By Anare Dupont. Ooreright, 1018, by Tie Frew (ubushing Co, (Tne New York Keeaing World), SITTING LIKE A LADY. 66 ON'T you think that's a amart frock?" asked the Average Gtrl. Down the Woman of Thirty, gasing around the recepties room half full of women waiting for the tea room to open. “Right opposite, Don't you see? The girl in green, Isn't her dress @ éream? ‘Her dreae may be but she ten't. like @ indy.” “What on earth do you meant” “Look at her,” anid the Woman, you'll sen what I meun. sh @louched down in her chair with her fect apread awkwardly apart and her kn in an ungainly position. If, w 1 wae a iktle girl, my grandmother had Geen me sitting In euch an attitude even in the privacy of my own home, she would have lectured me soundly on tho impropriety of my conduct, and that woman le aprawiing her knees nearly a foot apart in a public place." “Old fashioned people,” eald the Girl guperciliously, “are often too fumy ut unimportant detall “I don't know whether you are re- ferring to me of to grandma,” said the Weman. “I don't look mueh older than you do, {f IT am thirty. But let me tell Ghe doesn't even know how to alt dows: You one thing, the women alive to-day ones that ever had the way that @ren’t the only any sense, To alt in jer Ya doing not only pearance, bi and common, just as much now as It would twenty-five yearn ago. No lady @hould oft with her knees and feet more | than two or three Inch true gentiewoman public room or a crowded car.” “What if she’s very fat?” “Then she must do th: best she can, But no woman, however stout, need |wpraw! all over the svat ina cariikea (KNEES SPREAD Jellyfish thrown down on the beach, as jmany of them do, There's another way in which the modern woman Ineiste | in spoiling her appearan © the very tipit skirts have been In vogue, and Tenet ie by crossing her lege on all occasions. ‘But this is euch a comfortable way to si “You, itt And there t# no doubt that there te a certain charm about rowed position—assumed in the right way and in the right places, We certainly can't alwaye aft stiff a ramrod, but altting in @ trolley ear another matter, The narrow skirt is bound to draw away } up and ahow @ good deal more of the atocking than my lady and the who! titude in ungainly in the extreme, if it cunnot be called something keep the fect clone toxether when walking Inn narrow skirt, and the same In true of sitting Aa we are on tie subject.” continued the Wonan, “there In something you are doing right now—if you don't ming mentioning it—that spoils even the ly O. Henry Vovesovovevsedes your stylish frock. You are doing thi came to this country with his parents, Bince manhood he has been an ardent | American. Hie father was rabbi at the Temple Emanu-El, and the son was educated with a view te following in the footsteps of his parent. The public achoola, then Columbia (where he te @ profewsor to-day), later Berlin end Hetdelbers. Fducation defeated ite purpose, He refused to follow any existing creed! After a stay at Cornell University aa professor of Ortental languages he came to New York City and founded the Society of Ethical Culture He 1p to-day the exponent of MORAL FAITH, “Life and Destiny” te his mes to seeke text book on morals that begets love of exist of Nght im correct Mving—a 08, How to Choose Your Occupation The Duties, Chances and Salaries in Various Lines of Work ——By Cella K. Hosik Comright, 1918, by Tus Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Breaing World), 24, THE BAKER. of apprenticeshtp laste several years, till 13 business of bakin growing the beginner passes through the stages of third, second and finally frst man. eee, Aarne Mee takers | There are other positions in the busl- nese of baking which the wide-awake gone ban 19 the tare 99 youre increased | man may fill. Office work, work on the! me day with the Marquis of Horodale. The Marquis lived in Regent Square, London. Old Bill iived on Limping Doe rompily, amp Guite uw lot. I'm willing to. take the Job until you've got something else to pa Creek, Hardeman County, Texas. The t the way I itke to hear & Cataclyom that engulfed the Marquis man talk,’ id the superintendent aj took the form of @ buratin bu%le provingly. "give you a note to Saun- known as the Central and South Ameri- ean Mahogany and Caoutchouc Monop- oly, Old Bill's nemesis was in the no Jess periiour shape of a band of civilined Indian cattle thieves from the territory who ran off bie entire herd of four hun- reg head, and shot old Bill dead an he trailed after them. To even up the eonseq f the two catastrophies, the Marquis, as soon as he found that all he possessed would pay only fifteen ehillings on the pound of his indebted Ness, shot himeelf. Old Bill left a family of six motherle: eons and daughters, who found them- selves without even a red steer left to eat, or a red cent to buy one w The Marquis left one son, @ young man, who had come to the States and established a large und well-stocked ders, and he'll put you to work.” ‘Thus the name of John Bascom and Charles Norwood were added to the two left for the round-up camp ima diately acter dinner, Their but suMciant rd existed no strongly between them began that afternoon as they mecndered ong the little valley of the Canada Verda. They reached their destination just af- ter sunset. The main camp of the round-up was comfortably Yocated on the bank of # long water-hole, under a fine mott of timber, A number of amall A tenta pitched upon grassy spots and the big wall tents for provisiona showed in this business @ need for all-round| Weeon and selling are some of these, capable men aside from the baker prop ‘These side linea are of special adv to the man or boy who has not as yet acquired @ training in any special line of work. For here he may begin, and, as opportunity offers, learn spectal training is necessary, in important end well-paying part of the! business. The pay for the apprentice averngen $7 per week, and the higher positions the trade of baking Iteclf, Al) the lines| 40!¢ more A good baker may earn in this trade have the one great ad-| ‘fom $b to $% per week, The orna- Vantage that employment la steady the ctiel workers earn from $2 to $10) year around, No special requirements are necessary aa ier Tiara ge for the baking business, Any boy six- A Fire Test. teen yeare of of good health and I’ testing out a steel car with a view strong physical constitution, who ts to proving its Indestructibility by willing and industrious, can get 8,4 fire, a railroad company piace in one chance to learn It. [t 1s always of value,;of this type two hundred pounds of however, to have a common school edu-' #havings and wood saturated with o!!, @ation, and previvus experience as & set fire to it and allowed the mass to grocer's boy or clerk, wiille not ewsen-| burn itself out, The paint snd uphols- ual, ts at all times desirable. | tery were deatroy The only way to learn the business ts|wa¢ done t the car te enter @ large establishment iwhole, At present 2,472 apprentice and become familiar with all|care are in aervice on this one system, of ite Getaiis, Tie number of appren-|and this is about one-half of the total tiase {n union shops is restricted 10 onelof steel passenger cars in service in Gem cam seven omployess, The peried/ the United Gtaten as & structural The ornamenting of pastry, for which! this young « very| mounted isp ¥ but no damage | by 1 passenger | coe oe ranch in the Panhandle learned and ft ‘Texas, When te newa he rode to town, There he placed everysiing he ow! jexcept his horae, sudaie, Winchester and Vio in is 1 n the of hw lawyers, with Instructions to sell and that the camp was Intended to be occu- pled for a considerable length of tine. ‘The round-up had ridden In but » few moments before, hungry and tired, to a Supperless camp. The boys were en- suxed in an emulous display of anath- enix wipponed Nearer forward the proceeds to Lundon to t See Serer. 3 ot. Haeteane Gut applied at saddiiug and hobbiing their ponies, the debis. Then he mounted hla pony and joe a rode in and inquired’ for rude southward, Pi nders, The boss of the round- One rriving about ie same tine, up came forth and was given the fu. but 5 ent trails, tWo you Naps perintencent's note. rode up to the Diamond as raneh, OnE aunders, though a bose during the Lite Piedra, and asked for work ig houra, was ® humorist in camp, were dressed neatly and spracely @ everybody, from cook to superin: , stume, One was a stra ent, is equal. After reading the delieate, handsome feas note he waved nis hand toward the nwo hair and smoot camp and shouted ceremoniously at the toa golden brown, Toe top of his vouce, Jentiemen, allow ma other applicant was stouter wud present to you the Marquis and Mise shouldered, with fresh, red comple yt? |womewiat freckle’, reddish, curlog At the words both the new arrtvaly and 4 rather plain face, made attractive Getrayed confusion, The ne employed Jaugiing eyes and a pleasant monty sok started, With w surp! look on intendent of the Diamont s face, but, immediate: ecting of the opinion that he could shat “Mise Sally’ tet io name giv th work. 1 word for the male cook in every west Texas reached him that morning that cow CAMP, he recovered his compoxure tant inemver of with @ grin at his own expe: addicd bis bronco and de His companion showed little lees ab: —————— Pay-roll of the Diamond Cross. The 4, ompliment tror ngulshed alr of was quite a It's that dis sald Mina Sally, a® expmeted the notes right, had aristocratic nose that made him cil you gion “Any objections to my bringing that.” iny wife down to the nee He began to unsaddie, and the Mure Y verled?* ald Che superintens quis, restored to equanimity, fo his example. Tiling up swe hia sleeves, wning @ tittle t when we were talking." ise I'm not.” aid the cook, “But | Ta ike to be. Thought I'd wait ah T 4 Job under root. 1 couldn't ak r to live ina Wight age You didn't mention Mise Sally sprang for the grub wagon, Vea shoutin, Rew ook b'tiunder! sume &@ little wood for © 1 guarantee You a hot square de of thirty minutes.’ Mini y'a energy and good humor aa he sacked the grub warn for coffee, flour and bacon won the good onion of the camp {netantly. And also, tn days following, the Mare quis, after becom ter acqualnied, Proved to be a ¢ pleasunt low, always a little reserved Derintenden: np tan't quite the e for @ dd man—vut-—well, there's plenty room at the house, and if you auit ue As weil aw I think you will you ea afford it. You write to her ty come on, Al right." aatd Misa Sally again, Til ride in ae soon as I am reileved tor morrow Tt was a rather chilly nigh ant at re that I ca Sopeg spon to thing which many tall women do withe noe Salant 8 Sk Ree out thinking when they are a trifle A Hind te tata ap ites hervou, and that Is, twisting your nowh k after ite Interests, around the front lea of y. Te4you could see Just how you “I from the rear you would never again. Even your ‘best young would ceane to admire you. ‘Theos ally men may Ike woren to be inxing vines, but I am quite sure they don’t admire them when they twine their feet about the chair Ide like the tendrils of @ morning glory. ao tt man’ bETTY VINCENT'S ADVICE TO LOVERS ing no part in the rough ter osupner the cowpunehi afraid to burt my friend's feelings but the boys gradually came to + lounging shout @ big fire of dr *| Winning Her Back. What shall 1 do?" this reserve-which fitted the title qute chunks. a YOUNG man] “Peli him, kindly but firmly, that you Saunders had glven him and even vo F Xchange of token writes | tl muke it @ rule never Ww receive euch se sim tor 3 deiediad simoat te wae PeAesipalen presents from any of your men friends the cuttings. the brewing of “who care: i aa the branding pen a most dithe Atacaute War | for Maw uae found} tove with a girl and T think she cares The Marquis and Mise ° ; Ra the paiaereall s Fed) for me. But her motier and I don't get be quite clo: comrades more for another along at all well. Do you think my Was over a « young wan, ANG! inarrave with the gir) would turn @ut xoM wou toe fiat youth ashe unhappily on the ac ante’ wether, & how to win her) Not tf you axree with her beforemand Buiter cen me has always! (hat You are marry ng herself and wo pair of hodilee ‘The superintendent atl not fo neemed to me chat! other members of her family, Fee een Su nak set this business of| The Way to Win, Beveral times when visiting the winning kere 5. UL writes: "lam very much ta Id long talks with him ile raut affections vs ha Work (he Croae e with a gir, " are & number ve tiken a fancy to M ble And exertion | entiuly Asa matietloer over young ou She accep, at afternoon he rode v, {or fact, reat love doesn’t stray. And It! tentiwn trom all of us, and erme got to K to the rynch from a tour Pes ue Love you Hosnenned Wasn't WO NE Tuy one better th 1. want camps, and What is the OOS BORER Gk “There'll ve a man here in the morn: tvet grimvous spectacle ing to take your place. A® soon 4s he ntom shows up you come to the can 1 return of @ second-rate arth e? what eb Ene y of answers resp wled to Bis # woclally Impossitie Want you to take chars wf the ranch run after @ young mau Who loves ay eccounts and corres 1 want (To Be Continued) rides away, And the young man whose ——- 1 i fan ee tak ack her troth had be | ee ee bo TRE CAVA GIRL, “The Cave Giri,” by Edgar Rice Burrousbs, ant! ff “Tarsan of the Apes,” WU) begin serial publication in Tiv Lvening World Monday, Sept, 22 “The Cave Girl" is even mo.e unusus! and more exciting than “Tarsas of to her decision gracefully wad phe found out her "C.D." writes: “A young man w jest and finest sort, why be ao easer for for @ girl to} and be | vistuke In Line, I like very much and who has been « | to mahe her my wife, but the compe Ttlon diwourages me What shal § do’ If you cave (or the girl mase up your mind that you can outdistanve the other men in her affections Then yout "| stand @ presty good chaace ef doing aa Tam about to br an at ring, Ie i necessary select @ diamond? ‘That t# the conventional stone, pat | you are certainty at Mberty to cheose” according tg your own taste and pea& the Apes.” 38 deals with the advectures of am castaway 08 on me a lov island peopled By Averuicn ao savage Ueasio and of Min mestag wii e |) eo Me ee NN wee s cmt Jewelry from young men, but 1 am | etbook, = : = q \ ‘