The evening world. Newspaper, June 25, 1914, Page 16

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Che Publishes Daily Except Sunday b; od Dally Except Suetay NY now. a Rai tt nin ‘World for the Unit 2 end Canada. ‘One Year. One Month. VOLUME 54.... T been agitating. im running ra’ overtake organized labor. that we know of. imation begins by seeking benefi om ‘Then comes the barricade. And the innocent public has to halt > tts Business while the brickbate fly. : y a ike ha - Golf is a profane game—notoriotaly so. But we always ie thought that when polite people it they addressed their @rong language either to the the eticks or impartially and tmpersonally to the Maybe we have the golfer. If it ie true that the President of the United left the links of a select In golt does sot? And if ony lone four offenders got ten days for the @@ possible in all parts of an crowds at night. ‘gre more collisions? efita of sing. ‘Te the of The Evening W: In regard to the giving up of car te women, often a man is as , if not more so, than the to whom be gives his seat; there is absolutely no reason he should forfeit his seatr uniess ‘weman be old and infirm or with children. Often tired ‘worn laborers © prot- to me, and rather more perfect phys! than strap hangin: J days of the vulgar it is obvious that if these were forced to cling to a for an hour or #0 each it in time develop a column. VOTES FOR WOMEN, Yes. Raier of The Evening World . 9%-Preaident Roosevelt’ ever tof New York State? G.H. taste IMATION Is @ suffrage re- ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. the Press RALPH ESTER Prealdent, J. ANG! fi « JOSEPH Pi ER, Jr. 3 ALWAYS THE BARRICADE. HE Paris letter-carriera held up the mails and stood a siege for hours in the Central Post Office all because the French Senate refused them extra allowances for which they have Even in France, where the etate has had plenty of experience ys, poste and telegraphs, the theory that govern- ment control solves all difficulties gets a frequent jolt from cold facts. Politico-economic specialists who prescribe government own- | ership ad libitum for this country will find it hard to prove that they are offering & panacea against strikes and other nervous criees that Go far government ownership in practice has founded no Utopia The same hom ae happens everywhere: Organ- + @enfidence and growing ccnaciousness of power, benefits sink into _ Sreend place. It becomes a question not of benefits but of mastery. hurriedly stopped his game and fashington golf clud becases ancther Player cussed him ¢or gwtting in the way, we must ask golf to } swear at ene’s fellow-players or does one what does one do to one? _ PUTTING ON THE BRAKES IN EARNEST. AIL SENTENCES for auto-speeders are becoming the rule in police courts hereatouts. At lest the Magistrates are edmin- istering the real cure for reckless driving. A fotal of sixty-three speed fiends were arraigned before Magis- trates ‘in Manhatten and the Bronx lest Mendsy. In one court better. It is to be hoped that some day New Yosk can afford provide cammer music not only in the parks but aleo in some of usier oquares for the benefit of workers at noonday as well as et o—_—___ Query from two continents: Are there more collistons because fogs are worse or do fogs seem worse because there etters From the People The Even ARPT World. Fahne Company, Nos. 58 te New Tork. Tork es Second-Class Ma: ‘or England and the Coi AN Countries in the International - Postal Union 10.78 aly ter. Sooner or later, with rise of ing in jail, four more were fined $50 @agh. In other districts two and three dey jail sentences were As the Magistrates warm to their work look for s big drop in >) the number of “second offenders.” ———_-+ Prof. C. Mathewson eays that whether for business or bell- twirling the big thing is control. Prof. H. Muensterderg declares that the greatest need of the American people is control and that only seme grest epirtt- wal stimulus can give it to them. With leading epecialtete (n actoré as to what's the matter with us, maybe eomething can be done. — OUT-OF-DOOR MUSIC. HE Committee on Park Music has rounded out ite progremme the eeeson. The scheme to invite cinging societies and to contribute to the open-sir con-| man education and must be attended te in the germ of humanity, the child, two Saturday concerts, | and truly in his very firet impulses, The conquest of self-secking egoiem important task of education, for selfishness isolates the indi- even at the cost of elimi- this year’s list. More con- ie end better music for the remaining centres are only partial Get weather music ought to be made available for as many the city. The nearer they find Yes. To the Kditor of The Brening World: Ia the side nearest the curb tl proper place for a young mi when walking with two ladi BAM! Without Precedent To the Editor of The Ereuing World: In the article in your paper of the 20th that “an Erie Raliroad train ft all over the United Stat ing three of the driver's ri! the ba," &c., is not some mistake? In my long experience as a traveller on the afore- said railroad [ have never known an Erie train to run fast enough to overtake @ milk wagon, COMMUTER, ran into a milk wagon and acattered | break- | World Daily Ma BRS ga bed ‘PrOtistieg On. ‘Grates Watt) OS ELIA ALOIS zine. Thursday. Ju ¥@ = By Maurice Ketten Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy. NO. 4.—THE RIGHT OF THE CHILD, by Friedrich Froebel. (Pounder of the Kindergarten.) stamp human nature, even in childhood, Uke coine?—to everiay it with foreign images and foreign super- poriptions instead of letting it develop iteclf and grow into form according to the law of life planted im it by God the Father, so that it may be able to bear the stamp of the Divine and become an image of God? The theory of love is te serve as the highest goal and polestar of hu- is the most vidual frem all communion and kills the life-giving principle of love. ‘Therefore the frat object of education is to teach to love, to break up dosen parks in which concerts were | ine egoiem of the individual, and to lead him from the first stage ef eom- famiiy through all the following stages of social life to the wae highest eelf-conquest by which man rises to munism in the love of humanity Divine unity. ‘Women are to recognise that childhood and womantiness (the care ef Why Popes Change Names. VERY one knows that as goon as e Cardinal becomes a Pope he is no longer known by bie) own name, but takes a new one This cumtom Sretenee aut of rever- ence for Pius before he took up Vatican. This custom, He held tuous to aty! Peter. Hits Many @ man sells the when it comes time to buy a new set of ures,—Macon Telegraph. A Tired Man. To the Kaitor of The Kvewing World 1 would like to ask Miss M, seats in cars) if there ls any reas why a tired man should give up his seat to a shopping woman, a chew- ing gum manipulator or a girl on the way from a matinee? Five Queer Facts. of being used In war, Free dentistry for all railroad em- Ployees ts contemplated by the rall- way ministry in Austria. It bas been unofficially esti pi Sele see correct about five quarts capits annually, | B.! yesterday, ° | woman receive: (who complaing that men keep their! ane ts not satisfied until what it cost, and after whe finds out disappointed. —Albany she may be Journal A Russian scientist saya excessive talking is a dangerous disea: | take a brave man to drop this item it will be found at home— Dealer, wi | Cleveland Plain eer | bim hi can t aiding of! The man who sin, usually drawie {i 5 rs X., for Instance, was Giuseppe Barto-—-in English, Sosenh hie re now a law of the church, had its origin in 684, when Peter di Porca became Pope of Rome. t it weuld himself Peter he adopted the name of Sergius II. Before that time many Popes changed their names, but it wa: obligatory for them to do #0. Sergius not only established a precedent in this direction, but he set an ex- ample which all Pontiffs have fol- lowed in that nope of them has over retained or easumed the name of From Shap Wit. When there lalennshisn, enjoy it, and when there is not, enjoy thinking how you will enjoy the next appear- ance.—Milwaukes Sentinel, Most of the things that are put off | until to-morrow should have been done When a man's friends bentn t tell ite get je it for board:~Philadeiphia bis ae be ‘Taylor— jence in the mn Tl, to a utomobile @ present he knows Tt will hit the Inquirer. mae most important part of the problems not to solve. ool educat ent beloved mothers of human beings. ae es eoeree that every human soul may grow of itself out of its own ty. To learn to comprehend nature in the chid—is not that to comprehend one's own nature and the nature of mankind? And in this comprehension| (2 ie there not involved a certain degree of comprehension of all things else?) 1, ‘Women cannot learn and take into themeeives anything higher and more comprehensive. It should therefore at least be the beginning, and th® love of childhood should be awakened in the man (and in a wider sense this is the love of humanity), #0 that a new free generation of men can grow up by right care. Children’s Fashions | eet A PRACTI- CAL little model to wear with lingerie guimpe of pink gingham. The shoulder straps and double box pleatsoneither side of the skirt are trim- med with white pearl buttons, A whrite straw hat has is a shirred pink batiste crown, with ribbon bridles start- ing from either side; a rose nosegay. ee By Famous Authors Childhood and the life ef women) are inseparably connected, that they form @ unit and that Ged and nature have placed plant in their hands. The culture of individuals, and therefore of the whole depends in great part upon the earliest care of childhood. _ that account women, as one-half of mankind, have to undertake the tors of mankind the women of the present time have the high- to perform, while hitherto they have been scarcely more than t! will protect childhood, that it may not, as in earlier genera- the protection.of the human of the ti lems that men are The Love That Is Forsaken By Sophie Irene Loeb. Copyright, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World), ILTED! Cast off! Forgotten!” These were the expressions ured by @ young woman the other day—e girl in the early twenties who had juat learned the sad news that the man whom she had looked to as the most faithful of all was to marry another girl. | Her feelings | were desperate. | “Hell hath no fury like a woman acorned.” And there she was, now plotting and| planning revenge, now weeping, and| altogether the moat unhappy crea- ture. She told me her story. He had 66 everywhere, had paid her the most | beautiful compliments, had made her believe that the world centred around her. And now all of a sud- den this terrible blow When I tried to comfort her ai a: “But you don't understand! He was so unusual, And the things he said to me!" And there you are—the things he aaid to her. There was the root of the trouble, Of course, some of them were: “You're so different,” “There is only one girl—you,” “It seems that I have M delight t | More easily ‘p! been 8O adorable—had just taken her | f! 25, SEA E NRHN T wl a) Dopyright, 1014, by The Y DAUGHTER, a woma But a man, « dream and NF ES SIONS Na ROLE @ canoe and a roulette w say which way they shall.gurn? jew York Evening World), i—who eam @ mule go ALWAYS by contrariea Lo! a simple dameel arrayeth herself ii glowing colors that she may ye of mai playeth the “Come hithe: he ehall see HER, and no other. For she weareth the "Keep away! I would answer him straightway “Nay, none of these! But lend | rest shall be added unto me!” Go to! Who is so dangerous as a “Seek not to flirt with me, for I “Nay, take me not SERIOUSLY, Unto the Celebrity she talketh into her snare. Go to! Mice are mine abominat bide, but the fear that con Comyright, 1914, ty The Prow Publishin, CHAPTER XLVIII. (@ie=m|ACK had told me that Ned | Somers asked bim a good | many questions about the BZ} stock market, his acquaint- ance with Senator Crispen, Mir. Haywood, and others; but had said nothing to him since, although in the office nearly every day. “Mildred Somere was here to-day,” I told him, “and hinted that you must be speculatin: because we were ullding a house. “What business is it of hers how many houses we build?" Jack asked | frettully, thank people to mind their own business!" ‘Hi told you anything ! You m think those men work overtime telling me things to make us money!" he replied impa: tently, “but 1 went in on a little deal yesterday for the account, and it turned out badl; 1 didn’t hang on) , took the five hundred loss ba You lost $500!" + 's the matter, nue? You don't going to win, 13) ‘What’ suppose we are alwi do you?” impatiently. | believe I did!” J replied nervously. | “Don't do anything more, Jack, unless you are told what to do by men that know, will you?" “They aren't always right, either! I told yor it was a risky game, but you laying it! Now at the pe ed. Just jike a mbit “Indeed, not cross, Jack,” I an- swered, thinking he was sensitive be-/ cause he had bought the stock on his| own Initiative, it what I needed pay Mme, Lor- Just the amount my portrait) wan to cost. Why should I go with-) out things I wanted, or wanted to do, if Jack was going to lose money like that? I reasoned selfishly. T did not want my portrait painted for any other reason but that it min- istered to my vanity and because I did not want Mildred Somers to think I couldn't do things she’ did. “How much hi we on dep with Flam & ¢ * Tf asked the evening. Jack was nervously turning the pages of a new maga- but I could see he was only pre- runted. u 1s That all?” I asked, astonished. “LT thought with the twelve hundred you made the other day we had nearly four thousan: “Didn't T tell you 1 paid my tallor, and you have been spending a little, “That toot we had the night closed the big deal fifty look ——— was such a girl in the ou.” “IE just can't live think of you every *{ dream about you al- great influence on T want Pee tres of you,” “I'm not half goo oar ja you.” And in the last he really struck the truth. ing men are very much alike. As a general thing, they go through the same proc of wooing, They atart out like ouse afire and then ‘another flame looming up in firmament that gleams a little er than the one they fan- ning at present. When, oh w! will girls realize that it is wasted rey to plant the dead sea fruit of revenge or cry their eyes out for the Clarences and Ken- neths that aren't worth a single tea ‘When will they recognize the truth that there is nothing so dead as a dead love? And when will they un- derstand that if a man forsake her now, in the heydey of his infatuation, when she has youth and beauty; what then in later years, when these attractions of love are gone? Is it really not a blessing that h a! T lost $500? ‘Then now We grimly. know the world like without, yo wa: me for good,” For when the callow youth pursueth her, she admonisheth hi ‘Jack we must giv tdi He had lost five hundred dollars. | | we) éven as & moving-picture poster, she dim Yet, if, among a multitude of such, there be one woman in BLACK, Now, if an angel came unto me, saying: “What wilt thou have for thy reward—a coronet, a halo or a wreath 4 of laurels?” me a WIDOW'S VEIL, and all tie widow of thirty? saying? am old enough to be thine AUNT!" And his vanity is stung. He 1s emboldened to show her her MISTAKE, Yea, he cannot be turned away. But when a man of forty cometh her way, she chideth him, saying: for I am such a CHILD!” And lo, he {is inspired to prove unto her that he likewise is still im the infant class. nonsense and treateth him as @ | Ughtweight. She doth not.implore him to read her his VERSES. And@ behold, he is piqued with a desire to make her “appreciate” him. | But unto the Bromide she talketh Art and New Thought and the Higher Love. And he answereth back and is astonished at his own brilliancy. Yet when the RIGHT MAN cometh her wi weeds and pleadeth for “Platonic Friendship.” And behold, by this means, he also fs blingfolded and led BACKWARD she remindeth him of her Verily, verily, unto a woman who hath found the combination and | kKnoweth the “system” a man is simpler to work than a phonograph end yed upon” than a planola. fon, and @ cow and a caterpillar £ sumeth my heart is the fear of @ Chapters From a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond. & Co, (The New York Evening World). ick, and, if you'll remember, I have taken you and the bunch out two or three times ain You can't @ things for nothing in New York! he snapped. ba! pose I returned abe sently, thinking only of the amount lost an@ used. Ebver- to be our guests ind supper afters 'y night,” he continued, been mighty decent te ince we talked of go! down there. Mrs. Eberhardt inslat- ed upon my having dinner with them last night when she found & was going to stay down, and sent me over to the club in their car afe terward.”” ‘And I hi hardt and his wi it the theatre ward Satur 1 replied. “Ane er nice su! per. Where shall we go - “Oh, I don't know 10 decide that.” i ‘Jack, I think you better let me ve some money. You know I have some new clothes, and I ran ip bt for them.” ‘You better let me have two op three hundred,” I replied, watching to sea how he acted. “By Jove, Sue, but You're an ant girl! Has any one dunni articularly ait until th may get another tip from 8000 and we will want all we can raise carry #! You know I told you should have to commence drawing to pay the men.” “Of coi . 1 forgot that” I ree low much will you have co Five hundred ‘for to-morrow promised Murphy” one of the cons i Y . s. i I write an order?” I asked, feeling Important. “Yes, and I will mail tt so that It will be at the office in the morning,” putting on his ha’ Sitting at the quest for a che dollars to Flam & Co. ubmitted it to UN de You'll make oman if you ki on.” He had joked me about my ignerance of business, and @ felt qulte proud as he went out to post the letter. Could I have looked Into the future, could I have known that of necessity I should for many yet be compelled to be a business wi I wonder would it bi made any difference? Would I have been more sensible more pract! r would J have gone on in my. less way, trusting to luck to bring things around all right? (To Be Continued.) your prettiest, here are oth While the next one that comes along may not say the same “beauti- ful things” with the same voice and For in the vernacular, the same longing look in th oye he mey bave other means of proving bis real devotion. It can't be possible that the wise Providence who made a human be- ing entfrely discarded the mould, ‘There are similar and just as attrac. tive mén, if only you will let them prove it. The history of the ages bears this out. Th are ever present the man its to throw himself in his is married within a year; a young widow who wants to live “only for her little child,” but whi Cy a girl who just “adored Stanley” in | high school days, but wouldn't jlook at him at twenty-five; the gr: mother who loved one man for fo! | nother to j hie plage in her old days. | And @lways there is the everlasting possibility of ting, ome one who ja mucb more suitabl} than the one bolted in the nick of time, and t Maa better to take to heart th known you for years," “You were) 10+ Just made for me," “T love the very Ground you walk on.” "5 did not id true paraphrase: “If he not fair tor me, what care I how fair be Mie deat, dry your teare and tosh It is human nature. Father time om whom your heart and soul net. is. t] it of all ills, many of

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