The evening world. Newspaper, March 19, 1914, Page 16

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meer a FETS TESA ESTARLISHBD BY JOSEPH PULITZER. tea y by th Pubtianing Company, Nos. Recent Super Now. Sew York. ‘ RALPH PULITZR, President, 3 Park Row. % NOU! a Tow, sont PLAUAR Beobestiots E batt"h Fe eX tr04| at the Post-Office et New York 09 Becond-Clans Matter, 4 L fend and the Continent an ‘ te United Staten rout Countrien in the International Postal Union. ‘Werld for the United States end Caneda. 10} One Yaar.. 5 $9.28 .8010ne Month - seeeee NO, 19,208 A GREAT OPPORTUNITY. T™ sets of Dille, each of which incans much to the people of this city, are before the legislators at Albany in the closing days of the eession. The Pollock-Adler banking bill, placing private bankers under * the supervision of the State Banking Superintendent, would make it . fempensible for Siegel under cover of a*so-called private bank to muddle away the savings and sick-fund assessments of poor work- - jug girls. 7 ; Mayor Mitchel’s police bills aim to muke the Police Commis- cloner of New York City stronger than any “system” which aneks to ‘qpread its corrupt roots through the force. Indboyiste are working night and day to defeat these measures. Gearet cchemes and cubstitute bills abound. It is openly charged ist o tig corruption fund has been raised to wage war on restrictive .,« Ne not even that at Albany— are Magerted to the contempt of ite constituents. It is unbelievable the Rae ws ony one darter mc legislation that involves the Business honer and integrity of the State, that concerns the pro ‘wastlon of enfliions of people. ‘ . ‘Wisst an opportanity for the Legislature to wipe out old atains ‘epen its record, rally tts own eelf-respect and pase measures which \ ‘que of: vital import to every eelf-respecting New Yorker! NS ed , : Uateed States & Four aveure rer end tilled ‘The chacffour Rept oti at full dented all know!- of the accident. Laws may come and laws may go, but U, @, Mal Juggeranet and ite cherioteers change little — th JAIL THEM FIRST. ORGIVENESS ‘is as divine as ft ever wes. Nevertheless few will bleme the young woman who flatly refuses te accept the x apologies of « gangster whednsulted her. He now says he is ‘very eorry for what he did. But the gir! declares emphettoally: “He will go to,jail—nothing lens!” - + There is one hiteh, to be sure. The young man’s name is known ealy to the girl’s brother, te whom the offender went with his re- sg The brother is a priest and promised not te reveal the , Bame. The detectives, however, know thet the youth belongs to 0" Ty the interests of the community ft fs to be hoped that be will ~ be cought and that the young women will continue in her present frame of mind long enough to mste the charge and ese him lodged in _ tke workhouse os an exemple to others of his kind. Time enough then to forgive him. : E _ ———— The Mayor believes that children ought to learn early thet there is jo im the world and that it fe punished. If only tej > * we had 9 evidence te go with the latter part of the lesson! . a ace . A GRAVE CHARGE, HB old school buildings are firetraps—all of them—and 6 | @eadly ones. The now structures are also firetraps—ell 2 ef them—if in a lesser degree.” . ‘A grave and sweeping charge. The fact that it is made by a — consulting engineer formerly in the service of the Com- om Schoo! Inquiry of the Board of Education and forms part , Cem acticde im the official publication of the American Society for Prevention, entitles it to consideration despite ite sensational ~ tok, is "Bee echoo! authorities indignantly protest that “every safeguard L the children in the schools.” The truth will probably foam’ to lie, es usual, somewhere hetween the two statements. : $ Sub the Board of Education should lose no time in examining Mr. 6 very specific criticisms. , Meanwhile there remains one ever ready, highly practical way * RevBiélp save the city from “being plunged into grief and horror by 1. w heloceustfof its precious charges,” euch as Mr. Armstrong dreads: , the fire drill. s " . , Short of the absolutely Nreproof building jwhich everybody talks ¥ fet but nobody has ever yet seen, fire drill is the best preventive 4 of Gisaster. Three hundred and fifty girls, teachers and maids _ qmeaped at night from a blazing Wellesley dormitory which was hope- £ leetly old-fashioned as to fire-resisting qualities. The building burned * te the bare walls. Yet every soul marched ont in safety. Why? Because repeated fire drills had taught discipline and self-control and _ °} the hebit stuck when the real emergency came. ‘Of all means of lessening the danger of a fire tragedy in New York public schools, perfected fire' drill is the readiest, simplest, * surest. Unlike technical considerations of building construction and ¢ finish, there can be no two opinions a to ite value. And it costs * nothing. : A . The higher the lid 1s lifted the easier it ought to be for the city to keep an eye on the pot lest it boll too fast. =e lew Monument fer Manhattan. {Fo the RAitor of Tho Vwening Woud: Op Gunday, March 2, a lot of snow the now ridges be thus moulded eater, to be replaced later by ma: le or by deathiess bronse. And them atand forever aa a monyment to the competency of our Street C1 ing Departm: the vaunted n back, in seventeen days! better suggestion than this ry COLUMBIA SENIOR. Gizty Cou: jm New York. ‘Te the Edhor of the Evening World ‘The Event <n err sere eee Straight From The Shoulder Success Ceara 39: Aggressiveness. HALF-HEARTED attack or an unvigtilapt stege never captured a city, Ner did ever a young man success- fully storm the fortress of success un. leas his campaign was aggressively pursued. Snowballs batter no ma- gonry. The artillery with the hurt- ing shells crumble the battlementa, 4 machine gun ts more effective be- cause it speeds a ecore of bullets while a rifle is being reloaded. It is the aggressive weapon of modern warfare. Therefore why not be a human ma- chine gun when attacking your work problems? Why should any young man be a mere “putty blower?” There is always one thing to re- ember, To forget it is to fall. And : ae ju slacken your some other fel- behind you who is waiti for that very chance to shoot ah If you're not inclined to be aggressive the other chap is, Why yield him the road and find yourself in bis dust cloud? It is well to be ready punch—to with the eit in your arm. But it if you don't deliver otaer fellow de! Hit hard and often. If one blow doesn't bring your problem to its knee use the follow-up pinch, Make it a harder punch, a full muscled jab full of the speed of aggressiveness Even as in this artic 80 mi inspiration comes to you to drive home your gsuments of persuasio! gressive fight for suc: 0 UNE that eryy thought Hits From Sharp Wits. Who does a thing Mt has as his reward the consciousness that it wus well done, even if praise iv withheld. ~-Albany Journal. 5 . As a harbinger of spring the pru- dent man places less reliance on th first robin than he does on the box soore.~ Boston, Tranecript. If we are to believe what we have heard for many years, Opportunity is ‘egulur knocker, yet it does not have utation of a pessimist —New 8 States, Every booater should also be able to shove a little.-Macon Telegraph, .. 8 The mills of industry rarely ever turn out calamity howlera,— Macon Telegraph, oe e To tell your troubles to an enemy would please him; to tell them to a friend distresses him; to tell them to one who is neither friend nor enemy How counties are there in York te? LYNDON G. TUTHILL, Gumolk, N. ¥. {bores him; then why tell them at all? |--Albany Journal, © ! . ng World D Such Is Life! #4 ais ot are ara ars aily Magazi Goprrigtt, 1914, _.ty The Prem Pubitwbing On, (Tee Hew York Evening Worl This 1S MRS JOHN'S LAWS . ev ene LABEL OW BACH ’ rad keg Boss WEIGHT [Some Historic of Desori; Talks to a Fat beni Was | 15 PAPTHFUL UNTO DEATH,” from ‘4 Dog of Flanders,” by Ouida. HEN the supper smoked on the board and the voices were loudest and the Christ Child brought choicest gifts to Alois, Patrasche watching always an occasion, glided out when the door was un- latched by @ careless new owner, and as swiftly as his weak and Ured limbs would bear him sped over the snow in the bitter bleck night. He had only one thought—to follow Nello. A human friend might ‘e paused for the pleasant meal, the cheer of warmth, the cosy slumber; but that was not the friendship of Patrasche. He remembered a bygone time when an old man and a little child bad found him sick unte death in the wayside ditch. So many passeraby had tredden through and through the snow that the dog had a hard task to retain any hold on ¢! ok. followed, But he kept on his way: a poor, gaunt, shivering thing; and by patience traced the steps he loved into the very heart of the burgh and up the steps of the great Cathedral. “He ts gone to the pictures that he loved,” thought Patrasche The portals of the Cathedral were unclosed after the midnight mass. Some heedlessness in the custodians had left one of the doors unlocked. By that accident the footfalls Patrasche sought had passed through into the building, leaving the white marke of snow upon the dark stone floor. By that slender white thread frozen as it fell he was guided through the in- tense silence through the immensity of the vaulted space straight to the gates of the chancel, and, stretched there upon the stones, he found Nello, He crept up and touched the face of the boy. “Didst thou dream that I should be faithless and forsake thea, b—e dog?” said that mute caress. ‘The lad raised himectf with a low ery and clasped Bim close. “Let es ie down and die together,” he murmured. “Men have no need of us and we are all alone.” Under the Rubens they lay together quite atill, and soothed almost into a dreaming slumber by the numbing narcotic of the cold. Suddenly through ‘kness a great white radiance streamed through the vastness of the . the moon, that wi t, had broken through the clouds, the light reflected from the snow without was clear as the light of dawn. It fell through the arches full upon the two pictures above from which the boy on his entrance had flung back the vell. The Elevation and the Descent from the Cross were for one instant vi Nello rose to his feet and stretched hi ms to them. The tears of a Passioned e sy slistened in the paleness of his face. | “T have seen them i loud, “Oh, God, it !s enough!” y—once more @ great darkness cov- ‘The arma of the boy drew close again the body of the dog. “We shall see hie face there,” he murmured, “and He will not part us, T think.” On the morrow by the chancel of the Cathedral the people of Antwerp found them. They were both dead; the cold of the night had frozen into stillness alike the young life and the old. When the Christmas morning broke and the priests came to the temple, they saw them lying there on the stones together. Above, the veils were drawn back from the great visions of Rubens and the fresh rays of the sunrise touched the thorn-crowned head of the Chrint, Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers ENEVER | really love each other with @ love as possible a| Permanent as it is intense I can! eee that anything is gained by defer- long en- agement, should be avoided, | Thie does ‘not! f i mean that two young persons| "8S. 8." writes: “What are the ‘duties assigned to the best man? the best man selected by the brid groom, and should he be the bride- groom's brother? Does the best man chose bis own jd of honor, or is the selection ‘The best man’ in to ; take operas of, £0 rine. The bride- jec! does mean that they should wait to room selects Bim. and he may or may should get mar? rled after a brief acquaintance, ex- tending over & H few months or mn we It Many @ man fails over his own bluf.—Macon Telegraph, ‘ | become very well acquainted before | bride chooses the maid of honor, to- entering upon an engagement of mar- gether with her other attendants if riage, But after they are cure they abe has them, DRIVER, PuT MRS JOH LOAF IN A PAPER ANS DEUNER TTS IN, DON'T EAT ANY THI MATS TOUCHED THe “pi FuooR, , IT'S UNSANITARY What Every Woman Should Remember By Sophie Irene Loeb. eS Nee Tock reins Wont PROPOS of the mother who told A @ Magistrate that she did not want ber daughter to go to school for fear she would be- come a suffra- gist and not get married, there are a few things» to be remem- bered by every woman who would seek the matrimonial mar- ket as the moat desirable means of smooth sailing on the sea of life. Strange to say, in the upper hun- dreds as well as in the lower mill- fons, women exhaust endless energy im getting married in the pursuit of Mfe happiness and yet lose that energy when st: ing married. iF to get married— If she can be ba) And the busi- staying happily married has ite pros and cone, just as any other business. The ledger of life in double har- ness demanda a debit and a credit for both parties, an accounting aya- tem of attainment, a filing syatem of finance, daily journal of give and take, nk book equally balanced, a@ calendar that is not too exacting and a profit-and-loss arrangement that makes the burden equal. The girl who remaina wholly at home is not, perhaps, likely all of these attributes, It {1 thing for every girl to ha: contact with the world and ita work; also some knowledge as to what she may expect in marriage besides “something old, something new, gomething borrowed, something blue,” im order to secure happiness. And though “happy is the bride the sun ehines on,” the bride is more ikely to remain ha, if he keeps these un rays in her heart. A few of the items that every woman should remember who would Gnd happiness with a husband are: To muddle marriage is much easier than to make for mutual peace. Forget the old maxim that mar- riage lottery; for over a lottery you 0 C01 1; but marriage may be 4 well managed scheme. bac if you marry for money or | x, Position, you get only money or po- aition, Love cannot be bought, Bealdes, 1f you marry only for love, don't imagine there are no moments of unhappiness. Never expect to win a waning love by moralising. Better look tra charming or arrange a good din If your husband has only masculine virtues, don't try to make him a feminist, for you will be out of a job yourself, If your husbend Is not as handsome as Mra. Jones's, don’t continually com- pare them; for as far as husbands go, te es handsome deca” e ‘ ‘ \ rm ace mm 0 NEN A REIRSIRECOL Te LORE pl ROY Rie a ama oR oe a Ma et eg citi Nay .; would Iie there awake and let that | Ooprright, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New Yort Breniag World). | (NONSIDER the ways of a Little Husband, my Daughter; for they. are iC stranger than fiction. ea Behold, how a wife laboreth to find favor in her belovelits epee. Many long hours she tofleth and struggloth before her mirror, ‘arrhng ing her hair in NEW fashions for his delight. Arona | She crimpeth it and puffeth {t, and pinneth-on curls of greet price; dae | teneth it with jewelled ping. yay | And, when at last it satisfeth her, she goeth before him and awaitets | his approval. > | But he looketh not up, nor lifteth his eyes from the “Funny ‘Sheet;” And when she addresseth him he gazeth THROUGH her abstractedly, & through a transparency. ‘Then {8 she provoked, and questioneth him, saying: t “My lord, how (ikest thou me, with.my hair THUS?” He regardeth her between his pipe dnd his newspaper, ae from w ce, and saith: : ‘ ‘Humph! ‘S'‘aliright!” He resumeth his reading. He is SO intellectual. Verily, vertly, she that divorceth her. husband for a CHANGR, te se one that transferreth a bundle from obe hand to another. . | For thy second husband, even as thy first, shall scornfully pass BY | many ash receivers, thet he may deposit his lighted matehes in the waste basket, and bie cigarette stumps in thy jewel tray. wes He shall wipe his razor upon thy “best” towels, and clean his pipe with thine hairpins. M Lo! with thy nail fle@ and thy jewelled hatpins shall he opeh BOT: TLES; with thy white kid gloves shall he polish his meerechatm, an@ with peroxide anoint thy mahogany dressing table. Pos sel At the sight of thy hair within the comb he shall rave; and Wathe viston of thy COMPLEXION, arranged in its component parts upon the chiffonter, he shall be stirred to scintillating sarcasm. _ Yet, all the days of his life he shall continue to PURLOIN thy talcuis powder, and to leave thy violet extract uncorked; to shine hit patens leathers or ease a creaking door with thine imported beauty cream, and te @rive nails into the wall with thy silver brushes. , For, verily, verily, unto a man that hath been ONE year. married, | there fs nothing sacred under the sun, save his pipe, his fountain pen an@ hie safety razor! Selah! Chapters From a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond Onperight, 1914, by The Prom Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), CHAPTER VI. Neli seemed pleased to have © money returned so promptly, N_ the = moralag | tho: he assured me there Was 80 neither of un/need for such haste, Gertie Cume spoke of the| ngs, an intimate friend of ‘Nell’'s burglar until ™ eee and complimented me 6B we were seated WwW at the break- ming ha re did you ge and other ¢' ttle West fast table. Jack You certainly bave was, for him, a little distrait, stew and ae 1 passed him bis coffee he suid | on arise, 1 neat, eae ae oe quietly: Don't you think you were a little hard on me last night, dear? is kK about it,” L replied. To think that you, think. AW home, because fat the house we lived in, an hi fratl, fellow take anything be wanted to, to y nothing of your cowardly treatment of me.” told you, Sue, that the only rai I did not try to do somethin, my fear for YOU. Why, I didn’t dare touch you for you might move and attract his attention. 1 must buy a revolver. A man with & weapon is a pretty dan; prop- osition for an unarmed man to handle at any time. That fellow w: des. perate criminal, and would amusements, New York, after I had visited Jack's si Boston I had been satisfied. Now my wants, my desires grew With amas ing rapidity, fed by my love of the beautiful and by my determination to be well gowned and popuidr. , 4 Jack's salary would not allow me indulge my taste, my longh y| these things was a constant ‘ules against ; T had, in the year before I mm Jack, dreamed of a career. -J thought T might some day be- tint, T had ton for were relieved when the meal was over. After Jack left I remembered my Promise to return the §5 I had bor- rowed from Nell Grant to pay the big bill. How in the world was I to jo it? an such stuff. So now I often bi the idea that I might have rich and famous by my own hed [ not married, 2 One thing only I dia not never thought of what some other man might done for me, ape hed I had married another. Jaok d been my lover, busband. my child? did L wish ' F Mig i That it was perfectly natural fer me to wish for, and, when I could Procure them, to console with. the ARTIFICIAL thinga of: life be cause I had ne ed to the = 4 REAL things I r i T spent the remaind: i {{ k had deposited the two In the savings bank to keep against the roverbial rainy day he had depos- Roa it in my name, but with the distinct understanding that none of drawn out without talk- But I MUST IT pay all those er before I id to them. my promise to with a shudd ckne: knowing would be no mol bi Well, I fm: he es ted my etrengin, and” to meet the extra | jo 2 A decided Jack wena $200. I had just about §3 left. But hi to mana somewa: Other} the firat time in nearly a men did. And, putting away the|! was out of debt. WHAT I thought of what I should tell him/tell Jack about drawing the when he found out had used our lit-|and WHEN J should geen rk to the bank | too utterly out to a but enough to hold the|! agein let hi the ya ok. Something might happen jc! aw: so I could rep! the mo then t Jack need never kno Remember if you we amused at wh t 1c | bo? the faults of your fiance you should Sizer ay te meh ieee ‘To enact continuall: : not feel abused at the same faults in| critic to your husband one oh ate your band. things that dri a D is bim 7 you. What matters it if bis tache is a little long or the out of its hair ts not to your fancy? You hate vani of your own, i It i not wise to Insist on. all your husband's cor: He may not object to ft, but he jood thing to keep your brain | as your hands white, for @ husband likes to talk to you a ell as to kiss you. If you consent to be treated as a Dresden doll and encourage him to eep bad news from you, you are busy to be the chief mourner at the| uot like your is ot ft, ‘al of disaster, Don't “shhh!” at him. If he wi itthe well-directed prai ap-|to sing at the top of his volee preciation of a husband's hobbi: him dislike yours sharpening his razor or whistle mal 4 A clinging vine wife who c yy of tune in the parlor, be glad not 4 ‘nnot| spirits are cheerful, ‘ or bear to turn the knob of a door or| Lose the habit of char ang \ count up a few bills or do anything! 80 as to avold the just critielam f ur hi for het aps the roots of her strong| tuaband signa the eheck, yor tubborn argument | contes home from his day's work, . won't change him, and you can gene-|above all, in the words of Ui rally gain your point in some other| worth, try to be , i ee way. Since most matrimonial dii ome out of triffes, it is the wise wi

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