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» and discipline. P ‘T TT ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. ly Except Sunday by the Presa Publishing Company, Nos, 69 Ao eA _ 6a Park Row, New York. President, pe? tn to le f Secretary, «3 Park Row, New York as Second-Class Matter. RALPH PULITZ! J. ANGUS SHAW, JOSEPH PULITZER, Ji Entered at the Post-Office « Bebacription Rates to The we ‘World for the United States and Canada, Evening} For England and the Continent All Countries in the International Postal Union. Year... $3.60) One Year. -801One Month. MILITARY TRAINING FOR BOYS. HE Mayor’s Committee on Food Supply, in combination with the Board of Education, purposes to teach school girls how to buy food cheaply and well. The plan is excellent. It adds » @Me more to the many courses now given in the school curriculum to fit girls for the duties of womanhood. An equal attention should be given to fitting boys for the imperative duties of manhood, includ- ing that of national defense in time of war by means of military drill The need of such defense seems remote, but so it seemed to the | People of Great Britain six weeks ago. When Gen. Roberts began Bs ‘urging the British to heed the lessons taught by the disasters of the se B a be a the Prussian General Staff estimated that for the defense of New | fmoomplete, the tally needs Wg be deemed final. The God of War ) Geedings as the makers of corporation war in South Africa and set themselves to prepare for greater wars _ in future, not even his high repute, his personal popularity and the | weight of his arguments saved him from ridicule in some quarters and denunciation in others. Now when the emergency has come Great Britain has to do in haste and at high cost what she refused to do when all the opportunities of peace were hers, The lesson is pertinent to us. In « well-known speculative study @ possible war against the United States, Gen. von Edelsheim Work against attack we could bring up at the hour of need less than 90,000 men ready for battle, backed by a militia badly armed “and "ite training worse than ite armament.” The conclusion is erroneous, but there is truth at the base of it. We should train our boys to defend the land with discipline as well as valor, et A FAST CHANGING TALLY. Y way of enabling the people of this country to keep tally of our obligations as neutrals, President Wilson issued on Tues- day @ supplementary proclamation announcing the list of warring nations as follows: Austria-Hungary and Servia. © Germany and Russia. - Germany and France. Germany and Great Britain. Austria-Hungary and Russia. Great Britain and Austria-Hunga Germany and Belgium. “+ France and Austria-Hungary. ” Tppan and Germany. _* Brief as has been the time since its publication, the list fs vr is already : revision. A new factor was added to it | by Austria's declaration of war against Japan. Even now it cannot about as arbitrary in his pro- schedules, and further additions ay be expected at any time on twelve hours’ notice, ot A STRICTLY PACIFIC SHOW. EPORT from Paris that the French Government may not carry out its purposed exhibition at the Panama Pacific Exposition in San Francisco is not surprising. France has need at home al} she has of men, money and energy just now, and it is not likely need will lessen for some time to come. » Absence of exhibits from the warring nations will give all the ‘More importance and interest to exhibits from those at peace. This ‘Means that the exposition will come near to fitting itself to its name— “Pacific.” It will afford an opportunity for the manufacturers of the Uhited States to display to visitors from all American countries how far we can fulfill their demands, whether of comfort, lurury or ‘Imgenuity. In many respects we can supply these wants better than “Barope has been doing it, and since we are to have at the exposition ‘8 free field without competition, the results are likely to equal all ‘thet our energies deserve. As the West has little in the way of manufactured goods suitable ‘fee export, the burden of the exposition, so far as display is con- falls upon the East, and to the East will come the profits, ig, therefore, a good time to begin looking West for next year’s as well as pleasure. nner nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnennnnnnnnanans Letters From the People} Surface Car Reforms. ‘BAhor of The Evening World: | Why ie it that in Brooklyn we ike to see some improvement at once in the way of making it at least & little more convenient for paasen- wera to get on and off,vehicles they are compelled to use day in and day out all the year around, CHARLES EN, from the ground? Would It ‘be a comparatively easy matter vemedy this? I do not believe it involve much expense to the 7. if the Public Service Com- would compel them to have where there is new only in the case of the old open have a narrow portion of \ fhe platform nearest the edge be- “tween each two seats made into a and the running board Jowered jpondingly. I believe in some in Canada the open cars are with two running boards, above the othe:, on the one side, is very satisfactory. And it d be a good idea to adopt some plan in Brooklyn. “Improve- ft In the order of the age,” and 1| Danloa test iat Aityraie, sents me sure the people of Brooklyn would | 65 or 56 reversed = 5 x 13. C. L. D. ———<——$<$$—— QUICK CHANGE, ‘orld: In behalf of policemen and firemen I wish to protest aguinst the tact that In hot weather they have to wear such heavy suits with thick col- lara and heavy 8. jot ~ome one suggest something more bearable for these deserving men to wear, : 8.1. * ‘able D A Problem, "0 the Editor of The Ereuing World: I read recently: "On Aug. 2, 1868, Queen Victoria wired President chanan over the first Atlantic cable wishing us peace prosperity,” Now, Aug, 23 is the 284th day of tho year. 234 — 18 * 13. 1858 lacks only one from being an exact multiple of 18. 858 ~ 66 * 13. Since 1858 Uncie SPOILED HER TRIP. + 00.78 or EPNTAT 7 World Zeppel + a HE Higher Thought, or imas- inary, Fire still raged in and around the Jarr residence in Harlem. Everything was present but the flames, By this time an entire battalion Was at work upon the block, and un- Jess checked soon it bogan to look as though the entire street might be washed and chopped away to save it from the devo’ -ing flames. Just at this point, however, Gus announced he had tapped a fresh keg and he would regale the prostrated firemen, eight of whom nearly drowned in the cellar, while Claude— who surely will get a medal for his continuous formance of gallantry had saved Gertrude twenty-eight times. ° Bat on the twenty-ninth time sho rushed back into the house to be saved Claude succumbed to exhaui tion, and Gertrude had to pick him up and throw him over her ahcultor and carry him into Gus’ place, where Limburger cheese sandwich and other restoratives were applied. Gus now informed Hits From Sharp Wits. work a8 man work. ‘Tribune, is to Knoxville but if she is homely he ex ledo Blade. Telegraph. Married people know where at least half thelr troubles come from—it is from their other half, eee depend on News, eee your wife didn't enjoy her] He—What do you charge for your to Niagara?” rooms? S*Ho; the minute she saw that rush-] Lodging-house Keeper—From two 3 ter she began to wonder if sho] guineas up. init come away from home and He—But I am an actor, vay faucet rupning.”—Pittsburgh| She—Then it's two guineas down.— At least there Is no s for thought.—Nashville Banner, eee A good another day.—0O! i the Parcallon | Sense columns of smoke all over the vicinity he believed the fire could be Woman is as competent to do man's do woman's Journal and If the girl is beautiful the man will lsten with patience to her silly talk, cts her to say something worth while.—To- Many men would rather show their ignora ice than remain quiet.—Macon You can always depend on your friends for advice even if you can't their advice. — Deseret reity of food in Dixz sllsn the scene, had succeeded through the roof and putting a ladder down through to the top landing. They might have gone down the stairs from the roof but for the fact that the gallant smoke-eaters from the second: company on tht had chopped down the stati the roof to the second story. However, nothing daunted, the daring and efficient firemen of Claude's company fell down their ladder—the fattest fireman falling first as a human mattress—and the n, all being good ewimmers, had By Marie expressed that frequent N to give color to this statement. @ week with a castile soap shampoo, of the time, Dust ruins t , SNGEING THE HAIR TO. and the hair inclined to be thin, use acalp. renew it. Repeated headaches will fevern will cause it to fall and lose | every woman's hair and in should through it, in this spongy, oily subst in their shampoos, mix ammonia wi the process of hirsute destruction loser may iva to win nature's olls maba-deo. right sort, the hair falls out, tent that nothing remains, the hair beneath the scalp, and Se poe, | The Dower of Beauty Coseright, 1014, by the Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Ward.) No. 4.—Care of the Hair. man; OT one woman in a thousand knows that every hair on her head is down the ladder!” a hollow tube capable of bleeding if it is cut. Opinions have been | bleedings cause thin hair, since the streagth of the hair is evap- | ties?” cried Mrs. Jarr. orated, as it were, The rarity of bald heads among women :eems' The hair should be kept clean; and this means washing it at least twice' no me nue lAayl" chorused all hair, and clogging of the pores of the acalp FTRENGTHEN IT roots and so as not to get the grease into the hair, itself, but only into the After a headache, or any sort of Illness, the hair needs feeding, to Ip hard, Underneath the scalp is @ spony why men become bald is because barbers often use terribly cavstio soaps perhaps, that .hey are bringing fresh blood to the Violent rubbing loosens the roots of the hair from the bed beneath the acal, and also dissipates the oily portion of this nourishing substance so that If the underlying substance is dissipated to such an ex- Daily Magazine, Thursday, Au uet 27 ow. 191 By Robert Minor Copyright, 19 with.” @ wall covered with pictures is to No man was ever such a bitter ia, if you are really anxious to have nothing but will look like nothing but a blot on From the way in which most to e: Chapters From By Dale @ chance to talk to him about anything, @nd forgot to ask him the name of the stock until he CHAPTER LXXIII, HE next morning Jack was away, fussing Norah until him come back a moment, but he wouldn't listen to me. What should I do? Call Mrs. Somers up and tell her Jack was going to. . something in the market to-day, and that I had been unable to find out what {t was? Or risk making Jack angry by calling him at the office and asking him about it? I decided upon the latter. I hadn't the courage to face Mildred’s re- eerrrrer rrr rer KK KKK KEK Keer Mr. Jarr is Still in Dire Peril Of Drowning in Fireless Flames AAKAARAAAAAAAAABAAARASAAAARAAAAAAA Junged through the water to the, of the house amid the huzzas of 10,000 Rallway outside the Jarr apartments. | delighted and appreciative hero wor- haste to! eh! uppers. as it ir. Jarr, meanwhile, was lying on afterward proved to be, they | his back in some two feet of water, promptly cut down the partition wall| realizing that at least his poor tango- to the hall and crawled through to! swollen felt relieved. save the Jarr family. Beside: ing in this physical posi- ‘Without pausing to chop the piano! tion, he was in the mental one of to pleces—for now the searchlight | those persons who, travelling in Eu- played through the darkness of the in- rope and wishing they lived in the terior and they could see—the firemen dreadful, stirring, romantic days when saved Master Willie from his perilous Napoleon fought for the heavyweight position on the plano. Three of them military championship, found modern tied him in the plano cover and with | America looked good to them when, @ rope lowered him down the facade| Emperor William returned in haste —-- from Norway and started something. | Seeing a good-looking woman of ‘on @ sofa all the firemen now burat- ing into the front room through the chopped orifice in the wall decided to save her, Mr. Jarr not lookin wi near as attractive for tl cleus of @ heroic rescue. “Come, lady, get on me back!” cried the ugliest fireman; “I'll carry you “And me with black cotton '- cutting and, consequently, frequent ings and these shabby old Cran away, you are gentlemen! I'd rather per- ish!” Montaigne any- nu- ie firemen. “Well, you've got to wait till I put e fitting to wear to go jer!” declared Mrs, Jarr. “That's final. I wouldn't give Mrs. Rangle the satisfaction of seeing me saved in these old duds!” and keeping it brushed the remainder causes the hair to fall out and grow scraggly. When the hair ie dry the ends should be drawn together in even clusters and then burned to a uniform length. This process of singeing ie very ensily ac-| complished with the flame of a candle or ® match, and the end of the hollow hair is closed up by the singeing so that the nourishing fluid te retained in the hair; and the hair does not lose ny of its gloss or . strength. Hair will often start with renewed growth | after a careful singe- ing of the ends, If the scalp is dry a little vaseline rubbed lightly into the How to Battle With the Blues. By Sophie Irene Loeb. Orme I Pad Nts Waa O you weary, worn and wor- ried? Do you feel uneasy, unset- tled, restless, and does the atmos- Phere seem filled with battle wmoke, through | which you cannot see clearly? Have you been laid off at your work or | lost your job?! Do you dreaé tho | future, not know- ing what may come next? In other words, are you battling with the blues? Well, then, do you know that “Ite an ill wind that blows no one gond?” And while nobody wants to gain prosperity at tremendous loss to oth- ers, the fact is that by and by things are going to be much better for you will never grow again, Hair requires! Under Uncle Sam's domain, injure hair and turn it gra: while its vitality and color. Doctors eay that be treated after an illness. substance Ip, but One reason They do not grow in the nee provided to feed them. th the hair wash by rubbing, viol and then complete tly, with the beltef, Ip to feed the hair, medium rescuing weight screaming| th usually thrives on artificial oils of the While at present there may be an eS mnsottled atate of affairs, yet every- proaches, neither did I dare let her find out that Jack had information I had not given her. So waiting until nearly 10 o'clock, when I was sure Jack would be in his office, I called up. Jack had posi- tively forbidden me to do this unless I were 111, or something really serious made it necessary, as Mr. Flam did not ke his employees to be called to the phone on private matters dur- ing business hours. “Yes,” they answered when I asked if Jack was there. “Mr. Coolldge ts here, but he is busy. Is it anything important?” BAC S perspective to give such things their proper value. in a dreadful hurry to get she was in tears. I hadn't had left the house. I tried to make WELOR WRT By HELEN ROWLANDS . by the Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World.) ANY a girl fancies that a man has lost bis heart to her when he has only temporarily misiaid it. When @ man says that he considers a girl “worth while” nowadays, he merely means that he considers her “worth whil-ing away the time A honeymoon crowded with kisses {s as tiring to the average man a@ the eye; it takes a little space and ’ woman-hater that he could pass by @ hosiery shop without glancing at the window. In the opinion of most men, love is represented by the “heart-line,” marriage by the “clothes-line” and divorce by the “life-line.” A man seldom loves a woman as he should—perhaps because he finds it 80 much more interesting to love some other woman as he shouldn’t Be very firm in telling a man that he mustn't make love to you—that him begin immediately. One can get #0 close to a beautiful painting that it will look lke smudge, and a husband can get so close to his wife that she life, runaway marriages turn out there appears to be nothing like a love-match for lighting the flame of hatred. It takes just two@ainutes to swallow « high-ball—and just two hours jain to his wife how he happened to do it. a Woman’s Life Drummond Copyright, 1914, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) mind if I go to the telephone?” “No, indeed!" I assured her, but I was not so stupid that I did not know that she had gone to telephone Ned just what I bad told her. Upon her return to the table, Mil- dred questioned me closely as to who told Jack, and all about it. I told her all I knew. which was lit*le—and changed the subject. After we fi ishe* our lunc’) on we went to a ir latina so Jack got home before I here in the world have you been, Su *” he asked, impatiently; “I've been home nearly an hour!" “Oh, Mildred called me up and sald I owed her a luncheon and a atinee because I won last night. I couldn't very well refuse, could 1? But what's the particular reason you had for wanting me at home?” “Well, I've made a bully trade to- day, Sue! We'll make ten thousand dollars if it keeps going.” Then, frowning, and in a different voice, “I thought I had told you never to tele- phone the office unless it was # case of sickness!" “But | was so anxious,” I pleaded, “See that you never do it again. If you do I shail leave word in the Cine) that t am not to when you “All right, I won't do it again. Bo now tell me what stock it is and how much you made to-day.” “It is C. C, L, again. You remem- ber the Inst deal didn’t amount to much? But Cosgrove told me to-da'y that they were not quite ready for the advance at that time, but that now there will be something doing. It surely looked like it to-day!” “How much did you make? I de lease tell him that Mrs. Coolidge manded. would like to speak to bim!" ‘Nearly $65,000, and with our itm. “Hello, Sue! ited capital.’ I'm eo glad I didn't “Hello!” 1 answered, draw out what little I made last “Well, whi fe? Anything! time when you almost insisted I wrong?” Jack's voice plainly showed ®hould. Cosgrove tells me it will bis impatience at the call. open up in the morning. If it does, “No, nothing serious. whall have considerably more But, Jacl forgot to tell me the name stock you are going to buy!” “I thought I had told you never to call me in business hours!” and the telephone clicked as be bung up the receiver. Asi I did not know what to do, After considering some little time, I decided on a subterfuge. I would call Mildred up, meet her somewhere at lunch—this had become quite a habit with us—and tell ber that Jack had teld me he was to have some information on a stock from Mr. Cosgrove, and was to tell me about it when he came home. I could think of no r way to sat- isty Mildred should hear of it, or iy ane should make @ lot of money, to explain why I it my promise to her. BO thought to breakin, jack by telling her. en I telephoned ghe said she would be delighted to lunch with me, “You owe me @ luncheon after win- ning all my money last night, Sue!” she said as she accepted my invita- tion. ‘When we were part way through I told her as I had planned. That Jack was to hear something and would tell me when he came home. She immediately excused herself for & moment. “I forgot something, Sue. You don’t where those who know will tell you that things will “pick up” in a big way in this country and opportunity will be knocking every minute. you, who are not doing as well as you might, right now, and are worrying over things you cannot pos- sibly help at present, may well be- Neve it. Young woman of the factory, whose firm perchance ships all the products abroad and at present is not working full time, must understand. that pretty soon your services will bo re- quired to their fullest capacity in various channel You, who have sought a home here, having left your fatherland, which bappens to be one of the warring kingdoms, if you are thinking of those loved ones who are in the thick ef the fight, you must console yourself with the truth that things might be a great deal worse. Be glad that you a our immedi family are SAFE at east, and under FAVORABLE stars. Al ittle mothers of many children who have been struggling to make ends meet, and who now feel the possible dimculty of making them reach only half way, take heart. “With every despair a new hope is born.” The struggles of yesterday are always I the $5,000. Practically, it the only stock on the tape with Tanould have made « hilise= oul ve ea s " that wa: "re not ing broke!” I told him, just cc Nora called us to dinner. et ui Jack talked of noth alee \enrough dinner bat whet he might have done {f he had had more cap- ital, rather blaming me, I thought, that he hadn't. We seemed, in our ‘desire to make money, to have changed places for the nonce. I was {90 engrossed wondering what Mik | dred would say when she found out—> ‘as she surely would—that the move- |ment in the stock had started and that it hed had a big advance ‘before I told her. Would she Liame i oe OF would she belleve what I told er’ As we rose from the table, Jack re- marked: “I hope you will be satisfied now that I am doing all T can to make money for you!” Then, “Even though it ls against my conscience.” “Oh, bother your conscience!” I re- torted; “I don’t see that you would ever have had anything if yeu had been guided by that!” 5 “Nothing except peace of mind, pare ape.” * (To Be Continued.) side-tracked by the success af to- morrow. One thing ts sure. The battle-scare MUST cease. While the bird of peace may have shed all its feathers, It con- tinues its songs, and will drown the battle-cry, Who knows? Perhi sooner than any of us anticipate, There is at least ono advantage in the present trend of things. Though such @ war as this has never been heard of, for its various angles, and the peace promoters marvel at its | Possibility in this civilized twentieth century; yet the day is gone when disaster can be PROLONGED indefie nitely. The world in full of great minds, This is a COMMERCIAL age, ihe needs and wants of the people are |bound to manifest themselven and the solution must follow, What with the telephone, and thy telegraph, and the wireless and the aeroplane, and all the other wonders of bringing together the people of all the earth, no great disturbance can occur anywhere without the vib tions reaching all, and without reaching to stop such disturbances, So take heart. Worry won't the war, but may wage its batts oo you.