Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER Dally Except Bunday by th 4 aS Vane How. RALPH PULITZPR, Pres! SP RNOUS SiTAW ‘rreagurer'® JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr., Bec! ve —<$ _______ Entered at the Post- Rates to The @ World for the United States and Canada, Park Row. 1a Part"how. 0] One Year. -3010ne Month UNTIL EUROPE RECOVERS. ~ mege than ever co tng oft. “We are trying to close an era of suspicion and recrimina- tion by putting in the law what the moral judgment of the community has said ought to be there,” declares the President. “and I honestly believe that when {t {s done—and I hope it will get be more than six weeks now before ft is done—we can all tale off our coats and get to work and look one another in the face and say: ‘This is « nation of honest men, and we ar. going to do business as such.'” _) i ‘Gahegrity, industry, tranquillity and optimism. , ——__-4- _______. ‘7 9" ‘austrian Troops Reported Repulsed by the Servians.— Headline. History dosen't forget to repeat itself. When did an Aw telen army ever win anything? ——y WHILE WE'RE GUESSING. ‘i loyal to ita British Emperor if « foreign ? cane aR. TREY RGIS! OKT eer : Publishing Company, Nos. 63 te York. | VOLUME 55.........ccsececseceseccseseseesee+NO, 19,887 JHE President thinks six weeks from now should see business with its sleeves rolled up hard at it again. Conferences with manufacturers and business men leave the Chief Executive nvinced that “the uncomfortable feeling” is wear- “lA good state of mind to cultivate at any time. Just now, when part of the civilized world seems to be doing its best to prove & delusion and peace a silly dream, it is more than ever up nation to be the champion of ideals, to guard the standards of comes a timely rumor that Japan may join in the conflict. Why not China also? The newest republic needs pres- igo. Ien’t it the moment for Asia’s patient millions to overflow the ‘world? Why not resurrect the Yellow Peril? And will India remain army lands on the shores of A TANG with preparations for « possible general war in Europe When a whole hemisphere goes war mad we of the New World at New TY Becond—Class Matter, ening, For Bnelana and the Continent an@ All Countries in the International Postal Union. 99.78 | 6 may be pardoned if our imaginations go on the loose. In these hours of wild surmise how keep back visions of Macaulay's New Zealander “biting on the broken arch of London Bridge sketching the ruins of St. Paul's” or the Chinaman foreseen by the late Harold Frederic, who will finally put us all to aleep and stand over a buried Western civiliza- tip gantly slapping the grave with his pigtail? Events are trying our faith in the race, 4) See Newport needn't bother to belittle its festivities, “Enter- ev taimments at Newport are not as expensive as people have been led to believe,” declares Mre. Stuyvesant Fish. People Bever really believed they were. ——— = TOO MUCH PRIVACY. ‘ACY in « man’s house is all very well when the owner is living in it, But with all the family away andthe shutters up, too much seclusion becomes a doubtful advantage. Thieves broke through the roof of five closed homes of well-to- eitisens in West Seventy-seventh street and leisurely looted the emashed the furniture, slept in the beds and drank the es in the cellars through nobody knows how many days and nights. the wife of one of the householders came to town unexpectedly epened the door of her home ahe found every electric light ablase @m appalling havoc of broken furnishings and dishevelled beds, digar and cigarette ends everywhere. Investigation showed that (thar homes in the block had suffered in the same wey. , passed these boarded house fronts a score looters were busy inside. Comparatively fow citi- their houses in the summer can stand the expense or caretakers. Mightn’t a few peepholes save trouble? - Ones 66 Wee FitMaweting Wort E," said Gus, the propri- ctor, “Me, I got to laugh, that I don't get a waca- tloa!” “Look how it rains! I Suess you are a smart feller, Gus,” Mr. Slavineky, the glazier, chipped in. It's getting so it isn't safe to be killed by a lady anywhere, “What good is it to pay five dollers o week in the Kitskills when you don't Bet out picking up wild berries and mushstools and getting polsened with bee stingers and all them things what you ain't charged for on @ wacation? brewery that much what would it cost me? Whistle again, Elmer!” Elmer, the bartender, who had been coased his whistling softly but had tomer, besas “There's Gus in to whistle, edmiringly. efforts to speak to @ cus chune for youl” cried “But what bas all this to do with ol war wortafor auveeet bet wor! lor he cuts his hand while hold! versation, I got to to his family, don’ Mr. Jarr. “It tan't ‘conversati oompensation—meaning ‘ Elmer hasn't any family. ie! he'd better not just what I mean. Braumeister ined it all to me, He sald at No, with such rainy weather as we ess you are emart, Gus, not and another perfect ¢, as an ordinary cee I have bees, in the chicken business for several years and have handled no doubt hal: Sic brite feo i pead “Mra. Pld I can find Do other Tecor ouuremely raise HB GAY chon i tb H. G. FORSTER, Freneau, N, J, Safety Nets fer Bathers, To the Editor of The Evening World: Why not prevent People from drowning at Coney and other places by anchoring a wire or rope mesh gpl, @x feet depth and don't let fol out be} shifted with the “ae 4 a Cruelty to Anim, To the Editor of The Evening Wor If children were taught more hu. mane treatinent to animals the poor treated animals would not pe so often forced to act in self-defense and use their natural weapons—their teeth. Dog muzzling often robs the oor dogs of the necessary drink. 1) bation 8 srownw man this after- noon lifting a sn yt Would this poor unimalticeersee ta | called “vicious” if it bit its tor. mentor? KATO, to call your at- that this summer echoolhouses are used for webools and 174 for W. H. MAXWE! » City Superintendent of Schouls, _ Bact Will Step Army Worm.” ‘Po.the Waitor of The Evening World: ‘This may interest your subufban Feeders: A line of dust will stop the of an army worm, according the agriculturist of the Lehigh Volley Railroad. In o letter to the the line of the railroad ® mere furow of earth their fields effectively. the army worm,” the letter Ri Ie, aA of bran two and a half pounds of paris To this add @ solution made five gallons of molasses and nine’ of water, to which has been the juice of eight lemons to- a thelr pulp “and "rind a ine. jpread je over your a when it ts half dry.’ A.D. : Another Freak Be te Baitor of The Eveaing Wor M. J." wishes to know ‘@ny one else ever found an within ap egg. Recently one of ‘To the Ealitor of The A reader asks how the phrase “biue- blooded” originated. Here ts the origin as I have heard it: When the Moors (who were dark-skinned) lived ip southern Spain the Spanish (who were lighter-skinned) could be easily | recognized, as the veins showed! plainer and blue in @ Spaniard, and acation!™ ventured Mr. Jarr, “there are plenty¥Jof other localities where the rains haven't been so frequent, I bave friends in Canada who write me that the weather has been fine.” “What I care about the weather hoiting my wacation?” asked Gus, “I'm glad I don't have a wacation on account of the conversation law thi “By Gollies} I hear Braumolster, what runs @ brewery, say at the lodge meeting what we belong to, that them workingmen's conversation lawe already cost his brewery forty thousand dollare a year, If it cost a Hits From Sharp Wits. It always bappens that the man who goes to city to get “loaded” comes home blank, . “Strike, but bear me,” once re- marked Themistocles, who must have been some umpire i» Mis day.—Phila- delphia Inquirer ‘The world would never know how good some persons are if they did not tol! it themselves, . If men would value themselves as! they value their possessions for the assessor, they would put the! estecin at & safe and sane le Albany Journal, Kuches that have wings carry no stabilizer, . Ww “REFLECTIONS.” the most foolish clever. When a fortunes wetigen that they bore them only through the strength of their ambition and nf heroes are made like other men. | teare, even that of disinterestednens, The life of the spendthrift is rarely ~ yy did not in a Moor, Also the| well spent. considered themselves of | aa 9 a ‘i ence = “blue. 8 useless cur le a bowling ir aitale 1 eek. ON mHe ter oen Ni ht ea I oe Contemet Sor. Fiehoe. ae with the philosophers a hidden desire te ous-| avenge thelr wrat! injustice things o€ whien ebe deprived the ‘workiogmaa’e com} 2 law— the new Employers ility ActT” ‘pay lot of money 't iT” “You've got it all mized up,” sald it’s ave any family,” replied Gus. “As for it boing conversation and having to pay, are Diily Magazine: s War Mave Frid tity, {© By Maurice Ketten GONE BACK TO GREECE “To FIGHT i | | GONE BACK To GERMANY | To FIGHT KATERINA HAS Gone Bacts ‘To EUROPE To BE A NURSE wn (| | PSSLADALLABIAISISAAAADAADABAAARA BS Mr. Jarr Hears of a Fine Idea; But It Is of No Use to Any One ferereerrerer rere rrr rere reer eee ee men get @ conversation law pasved,)cation he'd 80 al and then lose their jobs because/one boss him hed caps be there is such a law!” & wife right away!” “I don’t se@ anything to laugh at,” ventured Mr. Jarr. wom, T ain't lat at it, I'm only laughing about it,” Re rege Gus. n't laugh at a putas married no more than I would laug! at him getting hurt, but just the Gime, 1 am glad I don't get no waca- n. “I don't ase the application,” sald Mr. Jarr. no application; I'm talking of something “Slavinsky knows what I mean, *. Pop's .. Mutual Motor By Alma Woodward. Ors Mew Yock™atetng’ WoddS® don’t you, Slavinsky?” Just on Speculation. plied, Biavinag. ne oe Amar” re} ag HATRE you putting on “Why, it’s like thi” Gus con- that awful looking cap tinued. “If Elmer goes on a wacation fort asked Ma sus- iT | advancement and of possible promotion for her sake. 91 4 The Love Stories Of Great Americans By Albert Payson Terhune " Guorteht, 1014, to ths Prem Pebtihing Ob, (Ths few Toth sense Wad) NO. 27.—ADMIRAL FARRAGUT’S ROMANCE. HE drowsy naval post at Norfolk, Va. was mildly etirred in 1821, by the arrival of a midshipman who was billeted to that station. Ordinarily the coming of a mere midshipman would not have stirred a ripple on the post society's placid waters. But this twenty-yearold lad'’s fame had preceded him. lie had been nicknamed “the boy fire-cater.” The youth was Davia Farragut, He had entered the navy when he was only nine. At thirteen he hed done brilliant work in the Valparalse battle. Since then be had fought aud cruised in many waters. To Norfolk, Midshipman Farragut came. And there bls good looks, his dashing manner and his fame as a fighter spread havoc among the Tanks of the demure Virginia damsels. He could have married the richest girl in Norfolk had he eo choset. But, instead of making @ brilliant match that would have advanced bis Prospects, he proceeded tc fall utterly and hopelessly io love with © daintily pretty little Norfolk girl. Sho was Susan C. Marchant, and she was attrac- tive enough to have many more eligi the twenty-year-old midshipman = Y: Farragut’s love. And in time the young people succeeded in gaining her parents’ consent to thelr marriage. Farragut, according to the chronicler, did hia wooing much as Othello (id his—by tales of his own adventures. And Susan, like Desdemona. loved him for the dangers he bad passed.” He was not a boaster, though And some of the stories he told her were jokes on himself, As in t Anecdote of his visit tc the Grand Duke's ball at Pisa, Italy, when he w on @ Mediterranean cruise. Thi ry Farragut afterward wrote. It relates tu his blunders at the formal ; series of blunders that began whea, bis shoe buckle becoming sled in the Grand Duchess’s flounce, he had to take off the shoe on the ballroony floor before he could release the buckle from the dress He adds in his written narrativ “Boon after this I trod on the Grand Duchess’a toe. jagrined at my awkwardness, I determined to rett Looking around for my cocked hat I found the Countess of Testa using It as foo: warmer.” Farragut and Susan were married Sept. 29, 1823. At that time the bride- sroom's salary as a midshipman was “nineteen dollars a month and one ration.” It needed no “high cost of living” to keep the newly-wed couple \ desperately poor. To add to their troubles, Susun very soon became a hopeless tovalid. Poverty and iliness combined to make up a home life that few men would have envied. Yet Farragut never once complaiued. He waited day and night on his sick wife, cooked all her food himself, acted as nurse in an age when truined nurses were almost unknown, and from a fair knowledge of medicine he often served us her doctor as well. When he could be avoided sea duty, In erder to stay near the wife he loved and to make her happler. Again and again he sacrificed chances of Marrying on $16 @ Month, Two years after their marriage bis pay was raised to “forty dollars a Month and three rations.” But even this increase did not spell “luxury.” At last, In 1840, the sick woman died. Farragut’s eon, in his biography of his father, says: money | conversation in my liquor atore I got Bo I] really are?” and gets drowned or breake a leg by piclously, “And those being bit mit a bi I should worry, the because he well at his own ex- Siovest te. there. any But if he hoit during to yA him and his family. don't let him bave any conversation; 1 make him whistle, and I don't go on. wacation.” eny jon." Jace Mimer ton't marrie@,” aid Mr, jaxr. “Hal” cried Gus. “If I took a wa- special reason why you have to make yourself more unattractive than you “I've got @ reason,” muttered Pop. darkly. “And if it goes through, there's @ cool two thousand in it for us. Beer s'm not one to brag or talk The passions often beget their contraries. Avarice sometimes Produces prodigality and prodigality avarice; we are often Grim) & from weakness and daring from humility. it, Wisdom and Philosophy ——(By Famous Authors)—— ABSBION often makes the cleverest man a fool and often renders ‘We have always strength enough to bear the ills of others, adfastness of sages is only the art of locking up wisdom in t men allow themselves to be cast down by continued mis- through that of their soul and that, great vanity apart, It requires greater virtue to bear good fortune than bad, We often make a parade of passions—even of the most criminal. But lenvy ts a most timid and shameful passion which we ni nowledge. Jealousy is in some measure just and reasonal only te retain @ good which belongs to us or which we think belongs to us; whereas envy ls @ fury, which cannot endure the good of others, Pride bus @ greater share than goodness in our remonstrances with | those who commit faults; and we reprove not so much to correct as to t-| persuade them that we ourselves are free from them. We promise according to our hopes and we perform according to our Self interest speaks all sorts of languages and plays all sorts of parte— rasbly, in advance, but when I get back, I'll kDa ‘And when he got back: “Brown asked me to do it, on the i Ag Kiger aD, indignation, “He eaid this fellow, White, was the ‘big party’ in the hundred thousand dollar deal he was Oder to put through, and wouldn't take them out in the car, because White had an idea Brown was rich and owned '° And then he went and bought this hat and the gloves and I was supposed to act li just for the afternoon- By tt over on this eo?” “What!” screeched Ma, “Aw. Brown sald if it went through I was going to get two thousand out of it. I'd do most anything for two La Rochefoucauld. thousand, Anyway, it was just like speculating.” “Go on,” commanded Ma, grimly, “Well, the minute we got started, this White began to holler that he Wanted to go over to Falcon Rock. Now, any,one knows that that road 4s enough to put any car on the bum. I tried to get out of it. I told bim the differential was on the fritz; that the tires were just about due for a blowout all around; that the spark lugs had been acting funny all week id 4 few other little things. But he d at Brown burd, as much as to ‘bo you let your chauffeur dic- tate where you are to go?’ So Brown got busy and began calling me Ko Uk: blooming footman!" dare to ack- since it tends moaned Pop, “and before we to Falcon Rock they sto; at six road houses for gin und every time they got out of car this big ati White'd say, ‘1 fine thing your chauffeur doesn't, uch # drop,’ and Brow: t itt And then chard challia or cashmere ABI A Husband's “No more striking iMustration of his gentleness te Sacrifice. shown than in his attention to his invalid wife. Ils }, tenderness in contributing to her every comfort and | Ga Austro-Servian War in Alliteration. Here ls a "urik verse" publ re bows isthe inom Tomas Tt of ai iera 0 Tanguaee : N Austrian army, ray'd, Boldly by battery besiege Bel- de. tu 18es thet ‘walay awfully ar. ade. Cossack communders cannonading come, Deal devastation’s dire destruction doom. Ev'ry endeavor engineers es: For fame, for freedom, fight, fi furious fray. Gen'rals ‘gainst gen'rals grapple— gracious God! How honors heav'’n heroic hardihoud! Infuriate, indiscriminate in til, Just judgment, instant innocence in- still! Kinsman kill kinsinan, kindred kin- dred kill. Labor low levels longest, loftiest i ines. Men march ‘midst mounds, motes, mountains, murd’rdus mines. Now nojsy, noxious numbers notice ne les = o'ercoming HE house jacket made with a pe! lum is alwa: jefactory one @ preg case, there fe just the becoming rip- ple or flare over the hips that makes the very latest fashion. Tho alesves, too, are slightly full at the shoulders. Altogether the jacket is one of the most comfortavle possible as well as ¢ ceedingly pretty. Flo ered dimity is the m: terial illustrated, with collar of Inen, but ali the simple washabie materials are appro- priate for immediate wear, while the jacket would be quite as sat- isfactory made froin for cool days, Tub silks too are being much used, and tie washable aliks of Jap- anese make that are quite inexpensive make satisfactory Jackets both from the standpoint of comfort and of durability, For the medium size the jacket will require 88-4 yards of material 27,3 yards 36, 25-8 yards 44 inches wide, with % yard 27 inches wide for the collar. The embrotdery design 387 19 used for tae ecallops, Pattern No. 8355 ts cut in sizes from 34 to 44 in, bust measure, Pi Call at THE EVENING BUREAU, Donald wee Oman ‘Teese Petteres, dis o! “Ob, But ustomer wi H catering to her every whim through sixteen years of || suffering forins one of the brightest spots in the annals of domestic life. | {Said a lady of Norfolk on hearing of bis wife's death: “When Capt. Farragut dics he should have a monument reaching to the skies, made by every wife in the city contributing a stone.’” ern No, 8355—House Jao! tite Gimbel Broa), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second New York, of sent by mail om receipt ef tem cents ta stampe for each pattera ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly end alwayn epesity tise wanted Add two cents fer letter postage if in a hurry. ought, Poor patriots periab, persecutions peat. Quite quiet Quakers “Quarter, quar- ter” quest; Reason returns, religion, right, re- dounds. Suwarrow stop such sanguinary sound Truce to thee, Turkey, terror to thy train; Unwise, unjust, unmerciful Ukraine, Vanish vile vengeance, vanish victory Vain! Why wish we warfare? welcome won ocxen, Xantippus, Xavier, Xeng- phon? Yield, ye young Yaghler yeomen, yleld your yell. Zimmerma: Wherefore arts against arms ap- peal. All, all ambitious alms, avauct, awa: Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. ‘The fit itee's words ail a weet sh onan Eh Sete the verme ‘a 8 gem, 34 te 44 Bust. WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION 0 West Thirty-second street (eppe- etrest,