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< ea ‘ public schools _ ‘be Gs i a tas BecondCiass Matte: - Ape = en Re For fenaian’ ‘and the Contin in the International tal Uni ‘Werla for the United States und Canada. y be manufactured here. » A best the world? Are they all awake? two points. It recommends: in a minimum number of seconds. as study and discipline can make it. Even a hundred years ago we doubt if there was quite so much x ing of the enemy’s nefarious crimes and practices with the idea ‘tying him for them later in the court of nations, Nor would there Bre been such a moral outcry because an invading army saw fit to @ good round sum from a conquered city. Even a Hague Con- nevgr eliminated the principle that occupied territory can be to produce money for the needs of the occupying army. And fe to be the judge of such needs? War is not s tournament or a fencing bout. The blades have ‘battons on them, nor are national pocketbooks inviolate. Never- it would still be a hopeful sign if, in this twentieth century lest, warring nations could force one another to wade in with gword in one hand and a manual of justice and humanity in the ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH Daily Except Wapsey. by the Frese + oma Company, Nos, 68 to President, 63 . Uren, All Countries Pos One Yoar }o'One Month VOLUME 55.....,....cecceseceeseseeeceeesees NO, 19,861 NOW IS THE TIME. ROCKLAND COUNTY print factory, employing a thousand hands, practically closed its plant last Saturday because it could not get ite regular supply of dyes from Europe. The Gay @ convention of druggists in Philndelphia adopted s resolu- asking for changes in the law so that drugs patented abroad PULITZER. Row. a Blood on both hemispheres. OE —— FIRE DRILL STILL FIRST. REVISED list of eighty rules for protection against fire has m prepared for the public schools with the approval of Fire Department officials and the Department of Education. go into effect, it & hoped, when the schools open Sept. 14. Besides common-sense requirements as to unlocked exits, clear ys and disposal of papers and rubbish, the new plan lays stress —_—— ++ —_—__ “CIVILIZED” WARFARE. ARFARE is certainly more civilized in the sense that na- tions keep tab on one another’s ways and means of waging it, exclaiming in indignation when somebody strains a oo During its first week on the job the Panama Canal has ships from ocean to ocean and earned $65,000. without any pi to food| reason for such a measure, is obliged. t's certain departments at Present! Needtul Neutrality, Hae ete! ti ne. F) Drugs and dyes are closely related. The American Druggist eee that if the conflict laste another six months the supply here ‘German synthetic drugs (from which dyes are made) will be ex- : “The prospect for supplies of synthetic chemicals and dye after the existing stock has been consuined is decidedly If statesmen and capitalists were clamoring for a prohibitive on foreign dye stuffs, their chief argument would be our duty our skilled Américan chemists, who only need the sustaining d of protection to produce from native materials dyes every bit good as any European products, &c., &e. Here. without any politics at all, is protection. Are the chemists And what about American enterprise in other industries which, we have been told for years, have only needed a little “fostering” (1) That the Board of Education turn over to the Fire Depart- it complete controleof the fire alarm telegraph boxes in school- At present responsibility for the maintenance of this highly tant signal, system is divided, involving needless confusion and (8) That the organization of fire drills and means of rapid dis- in case of emergency be put under the immediate direction of one person in the office of the Superintendent of Schools, to be end that perfect uniformity and smoothness may be obtained. > The latter reform is most desirable. Over and over again it has demonstrated in this city thag all advances in fire-proof con on notwithstanding, the surest prevention of fire tragedies in is to be able to get every child out of any school- Rapid dismissal should be reduced to a science—as ‘uniform and Americans who went abroad for rest aro back looking for $9.78 86 La le de- uate These Who 18! will have The Evening World Daily Mag Fy, Bacrid. “Stir! If You’re Not Too Fat” “; ne Lets CLAMOR of childish voices came from below. Mr. Jarr mhifted his tango-maimed feet om the cushion on which they were superimposed onto the chair opposite him and looked out the window, “Is that our Willie?" asked Mra, Jarr, going to the other window. "Ob, won't 1 give « to him! He hasn't been to his supper, and Gertrude is jue that crows because Claude, her fireman beau, hae bis night off and they were going to the movies—'The | b | didn't cost much. though getting data for papers to read before the Uplift Club or the mean the Society for Supervising the Pleasures of the Poor, so that any- thing very exciting should be cen- sored after we had seen and enjoyed it, because the morals of the poor must be looked after.” me or with the neighbors, Mr, Jarr. family's social by the people t Wiles of Sudie, the Satanette.’ I do wish I could go to the moving pic- tures he for this ix very thrill- ing, they say.” “Why ‘can't you go to the movies up here?” asked Mr. Jarr. “Why, how can I go when I hay my social position to maintain?" plied Mrs. Jarr. “Can 1 go to ti open air ones, even with the children, and be sitting by Mra. Slavinsky and all the little Slavinskys? Or Mrs, Tony the bootblack, or people like that? Of course, I could go with Clara Mud- ridge-Smith and Mrs, Stryver and even Mrs. Rangle, if we all went in Clara Mudridge-Smith’s town car, or Mr, Stryver’s limousine, and got out at the door, telling the chauffeur to wait, and then entered the movies laughingly.” “Enter laughingly?” Mr, Jarr in- quired. “Why, certainly,” 1-pled Mi Jarr. Hits From Sharp Wits. It is astonishing how gently a Pongened girl can bresk the news to that their engagement is It # fortunate for people do not have to take out bunt work.—Deseret Lf ee The increased cost of provisions tenden, to revive the | ancient custom of visiting. eee Don't pay attention to the trifes, for you will have something big to worry over to-morrow.—Nashville Ganner. broken. that they leense to If you can eat and earn what you eat, and can sleep in a bed and room you pay for, you are foolish if you are unhappy and = grouchy.—Mil- waukee Sentinel. eee ostentatious {t Mud aS Aol wrgeiny bl th ourtosity.—Albany OEM OOE: 4 evulun’t go to the piotures simply wecause they ere interesting and I'd have to go as YOU may go to Gus's place at the corner, and the children may y with the children of the neighbor- hood, and that does not affect your social position or the children’s s0- Social Service Club and to complain| cial position when I take you and about to the Society for Interfering] them among MY friends. Yet if those with the Pleasures of the Poor—I| persons were MY associates, you or the children could never hope for any higher social position, and cad for me, Jerr. r But before Mra, Jarr could tell him the answer, Master Willie Jarr burst in, stalling off ane punishment he might imagine due him for being late to supper, by simulating a wild and joyous excitement, “Look what Izzy Slavinsky gimme “But you let the children go with remarked “True,” explained Mrs. Jarr, “but a ition is determined mother goes with. BACHELOR 2 GIRL. By WELEN ROWLAND Copyright, 1914, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Drecing World.) ARRIAGE is a peculiar chemical process which turns a fiance into M @ total stranger. This is the time of year when the tide of Love begins to go out and leaves the beach strewn with broken engagements, wrecked fiirtations and the shells of dead illusions. A wife, like a kitten, may get her eyes open in nine days, but after nine years she wisely prefers to keep them shut. When a man succeeds in making love to a girl without any trouble he feels almost as disappointed as though he had dealt at whist and turned up a deuce. e Doctors are the most fascinating men in the world! They at least have to pretend to listen while a woman talks about her “feelings,” in- stead of sitting with one eye on the clock and the other on the war news, as though they were waiting for a train. Girls spend their time reading love stories; but widows are too busy trying to create them, and married women tgo busy trying to keep up the illusion that they still exist. Every man fancies that he can love one woman, even while he Airts with another; but when one feels hungry one doesn't feel anything else, and when one is really in love with one person he doesn't even SEE anybody else. When a man complains of the girls who “pursue” him don’t forget that the mark of a real girl-charmer is his dead silence concerning all women except the one to whom he happens to be talking. ‘The only chain that can bind love is an endicss of compliments. ray ahaatwenaitinie-wetathh caret Pa eenan, ee ~ ‘ Rowe ‘ é azine, Monday, August 24. 1914 By Robert Minor Rea Oa A OEROLINOL IONE set naa ae ata oN iee yaa a i eae ia wa The Love Stories Of Great American By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1914, by the Pree Publishing Co. (The Now ning Wott) No. 37-—-NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE’S LOVE STORY. ATHANIEL HAWTHORNE—dreamer and undiscovered genius | went with his mother to call on some Saicm, Mess., nelabbors of hers one evening in 1842, These neighbors were Dr. and Mra _ Peabody and their three daughters. Hawthorne, having bevw away from Salem for a long time, had met none of the daughters He was thirty-etght years old, and love had never yet come fito his Hfe | One of the three daughters—Sopliia—had a sick headache and hed gone | to bed. A few minutes after the arrival of the Mawthornes, her #fstat., | Elizabeth, left the drawing room and ran upstairs to her, exclaiming: | “Oh, Sophia, you muet get up and dress and come down! Mr. How- thorne is here, and you never taw anything so splendid as he {s. He l#— he is handsomer than Lord Byron!” Sophia, having reached the age of thirty-two, had lost the fieu'ty o¢ being stirred to excitement by the mere news that there wae a handsome bane min in the house, Besides, her head ached badly. H Indian Summer { So she refused to come downstairs, ndding: of Romance. “It he has called once he will call again.” Which proved a true prophecy. A few days later Hawthorne repeated his visit. And this time he was intyoduced to Sophia. Says Rutherfc | “From the moment these treo met they Iknew they were mode for eteh other, Sofla Peabody changed the loneliness of the rreat-hearted student into pence and perfect satisfaction. She was his inspiration, hix guide, his continued blessing. | Soon afterward they were married, Both were of somewhat motore ore for romance—thirty-cight and thirty-two—but theirs was a menuine ro- mance in every sense of the word. Hawthorne had led a lonely life. preeiate his work, The public had not yot learned to ap- He had scored one lterary failure after enother, until he had grown bitter. He wrote once to a publisher: | “Lam the most unpopular writer in America!" |. Sophia was an author and artist of rare talent, and she appreciated her | husband's genius as did no one elec. Under this appreciation hig mind | glowed and took on fresh courage. Soon after their marriage he lost his | position as surveyor in the local custom house. Face to face with poverty, | he was wretchedly unhappy. His wife, at this erttical moment, urged him to |take up Mterature again, Under her culdance and inspiration he wrote “The Scarlet Letter.” |The book reored an Immediate and tremendoun ruccess, ive thousand | coptes were sold within the first ten days after it was published, Hawthorne’ |wus at once hatled as American's greatest novelist—and he owed the turn iu fortune to the woman who loved him and believed in him. One pretty little Incident is typical of their married life: Mawthorné always wrote tn a favorite dressing gown. One day, to his dieguat, he Bannnnnnnnnnnnnnre “Husband to the Month of May!” spilled a big blot of ink on this gown, The ink apot could not be taken out. So Mrs, Hawthorne em- broidered a silken-winged butterfly over the ugly # stain, Hawthorne, in delight, wrote to a friend: “My little wife t twin sister to the Spring! Both are full of hope and (Plath sage both have bird voice; both have power to renew and re-create the weary spirit. of May!" TL have married the Spring! I am husband to the Month Porch Patter —By Alma Woodward— OTF, 314, by the Prem Pitching Co, (The New York Ereaing Wort.) fern igi Ses Soikh at F Soue Mrs. A (pouting)—Now, Alice, don't Bet too close to my husband. Mra. B (shrilly)—George! Don't You may think it's funny to reatt : arm on my shoulder. But some) Ome For a Souvenir! | a sections of the Sunday papers.) RS. A. (suddenly)—I wonder if all these society women are as beautiful as their photographs? Mrs. B. (scornfully)—Of course not. Those negatives are all carved to pieces before one print is made, Mrs. C. (proudly)—Did you ever see any of the photographs my hus- band takes? They're really elegant, inute, please ’ even though I do say It myself. He's! Creaping soem my neck? Obey thin just as good as any professional night next winter when Rennie gets’ mad he'll throw it up to me. Honest! Mr. C (very professionally)—Now, everybody, just be natural and don't look at the camera, and those who can smile without hurting themselves 4o 80) Now. All ready? Mrs. A. (acreaming)—Ob, oh! Wait Mr. Jarr Learns All the Horrors That Go With a Social Positio tak NAR RNAARANH AERROAAARARIN AERA HAO RAIN | tographs, Mr. C. I notice you haven't for one of my roller skates and fifty Flags of All Nations and two cents!” he cried, and waved a small paste- board box above his head. Mrs. Jarr made an effort to seize the boy to lead him away for @ forcible washing; but just then the bottom fell out of the box and in the dusk of the room something struck the floor with a duli thump. “Look out!" cried Master Willie Jarr excitedly, “It's a poison snake!” And Mr. Jarr, in his bare and swollen feet marooned by the win- dow, gave a shriek of deapair. “Third Degree” For a Husband. By Sophie Irene Loeb. Serene ta bis Weathe & MAGISTRATE recently called a couple into his office in an en- deavor to adjust quietly their differences. The woman told a long story of mis- trust brought on by jealousy. And, sifted down, there seemed to be lit- tle foundation for her grievances, The husband in this cane was anx- lous to agree to the wishes of his wife, but objected to being forever subject to the “.uird degree.” He claimed that his wife's suspl- cions had al st assumed the form of mania and that « constant accounting of his every move had r:lo life in- tolerable for him—until it was with difficulty that he attended to his work, He therefore «sreed to :. quiet sep- avation and arranged money matters #0 that the wife would be amply pro- vided for, While the merits of this |particular cage rests, of course, with the courts, yet the hardships of the everyday household may be summ d up in this third degree method, There are those husbands who, in the vernacular, “get away with it” by strictly observing the eleventh com- mandment, which is “Thou Shalt Not be Found Out," going on the theory that “what she doesn’t know don't hurt her,” always comes; and with it the possi- ble adjustment, There are those who sbould be, and are, found out. And they get their just punishment for unwarranted de- ceit, These cases are the exceptions; and therefore matters are either thrashed out by the parties concerned or by the courts, But the average man bitterly re- sents giving @ dally verbal diary of his every minute actions, Many @ pleasant greeting from him has been The reckoning, however, | &¢. {t’a_a caterpillar! photographer, wat. coterie, Ss, cortnret Mr. C. (appearing)—Good morn- Enghel™ oreo. ‘The a ‘fe ing, ladies, [-utiful morning, isn’t ir. C. (gently)—Now! Every one it? And Sunday too—ah! still when T say “Hold!” Now, t Mrs, A. (with a fetching glance)— one pon on 1 hear you such beautiful pho-~ Mrs. C. (following him)—Freddte! What's the matter? Mr. C. (sombrely)—Took it on top [3 Ge sunset picture. Forgot to turn le right here on the steps and you/|the film. rice A lovely group photograph; and|' Mra C.—Oh, Freddie! And right | after I told them what an elegant Chorus: Oh, DO, Mr C.! It'll be| photographer you were! What are 30 sweet to keep always, And nobody | you going to do about it? knows whether we all will meet in.| Mr. C. (without a moment's hesl- Mr. C (reluctantly?)—All right. |tation)—Tell ‘em they all moved and Everybody get together. I'll go and | spoiled the negative. wet my, rd in the, amfatula tren chirps, ROra same ood much Giecus “Te: “wat they all say senenenannr aie vats The May Manton Fashions i [A aeaenen a aemaeemnaanaaane ) HERE 30 I many attrac- tive features in this blouse that it is @ little dimcult to select any one as especially worthy of mention. The nar- row vestee with tho collar allows at~ tractive use of white or other contrasting material, and the blouse ftself is just full enough to five bezoming folds. The fact that its raglan sleeve: fitting can be put together in the briefest pos- ible space of time adds to its charm, In this case dotted muslin {s combined with white organdie, The design Is just as well adapted to silk as it is to cotton and materials, however, and it ‘would be pretty for the new soft finished taffeta that promises to be worn throughout the season, For the size the, blow require yurds material 27, 24 yards 36, 2 yards 4 inches wide, with %% Pattern No, 8285—Clouse with Vect Effect, 24 to 40 bust. yard 36 inches wide for vest, collar and cuffs, Pattern No, 0285 1s cut in sizes from 31 to 40 inches bust measure. taken any of me since you've been ere. Mrs,_C. (hanpy idea)—I tell vou what, Freddie, let's pose all the peo- then we'll have one as a souvenir. wool Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second atreet (oppo to $site Gimbel Bros), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, New York, or sent by mai! dn receipt of ten cents tn cola or mpe for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT--Write your address plainly and alwase specity nted, Add two cents for lettor postage if in a hurry, atified by being confronted with; such confidence, Everlasting prying? “Where were you?” or "Who was) Into such of a husband's activities as with you?" or “What time was it?"| he does not disclose himself tends ¥ to make him secretive and does not A_man hates to think that be 1s| help tho way to happiness, NOT to be trusted. And there are| It is the perversity of human na. those, I am sorry to say, who de-| ture to continue deception where it Uberately falsity In order to AVOID| is EXPECTED, And It 's commom trouble, For often a very harmiless| knowledge that the man who has action on their part Is Hable to be/the most freedom 1s usually the one- MAGNIFIED to an alarming degree| who takes least advan of it, by the wives with tendencies toward| The woman who would be fair does suspicion. not make unreasonable demands jas No woman can possibly continue to] to the actions of the man whom ¢ ebe love of her bus-| has to lo basa ‘without ‘conndence, tr fe the| "the had ‘of love that ie diols.” wise wife who and tol ia unwosthy ef its mame (> ith