The evening world. Newspaper, September 10, 1914, Page 16

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seine, Thetedes. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. | Company, Nos, 63 io) k N PH PULITZER, Row. ‘ ‘ H PULITZER, Jr. fe Row. k 4 BAC @ PoxtOffice at New, Yoh an Second-Class Matt: ‘, eS to The Bvoning| For England and the Continent and 0 FR, (ie ‘World for the United States All Countries in the International and i Postal Uni Copyright, 1914, by the Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Evesing Words . $a7s ' IVES there & man with soul so dead who never to his wife hath subd, “You could do ANYTHING on earth with me if you'd only go about it the right way! VOLUME 55... . 0. ccc ceceeeeeceeeseenseee cess NO, 19,878 GERMANY’S POLITICAL. SHIFT. REPORT from Beauvais states that the Germans have treated the people in thai neighborhood, whether peasants or citi-/ zens, with distinguished consideration. They demanded only in the way of food and wine, and these they paid for, pase- en with an exchange of courtesies with the local authorities. ‘The contrast between this punctilious courtesy in France and the ity displayed in Belgium. has naturally excited curiosity It Teeembered that at the oatbresk of war it was toward France that Fiderann rage, whether officiat or popular, was mainly directed. ‘The were charged with having stirred up.tho Russians and with their armies. It was announced that Germany’s first aim be to crush France utterly, strip her of her colonies and reduce to the condition of « third-rate power for a century to come; for, ording to Berlin statesmen and war lords, only by the destruction ‘Of France as a military power could Germany ever attain security. = All at once German politics has-made shift as striking as that Dy the right wing of her army when it turaed from Paris to the goeastward. In place of treating the French as natural enemies, the r are now striving to conciliate them as possible friends. 4 ing her fields from pillage, her cities from extortion, and compli- "} sbenting her armies on their courage and chivalry, it looke as if the wish nothing of France bat love, and would give anything, Alsace and Lorraine, to get it. As the Beauvais report says: When a rich widow marries a poor young man she merely exchanges her gold for his brass. The average man is so fond of riddies that every time he has @ spare hour he spends it in trying to solve another woman. It 1s so much easier and cheaper for a man to endow a girl with o Bale before marriage than it ts @& him to endow her with a new hat after marriage. . ‘There have been many clever guesses as to how the Venus di Milo lest | her arzhs, but every wife surmises that it was by trying to hold om te | heaven with one band and on to her husband with the other. % That famous evangelist who asserts that “men will EAT. after deat,” apparently knows that the way to a man’s conscience is the same as the , Way to his heart. But, alas! will women have to COOK in Paradise, top? | The difference between what you expect and what you get in marrisge is about the same as the difference between what you expect and what you { get at Christmas, Listening to “sweet nothings” from the lips of a woman of whom he has tired {s almost as painful to a man as listening to a funny story for | the hundred-and-frst time. | Marriage {s what turns a man from a potential monog: essential varietist, - Chapters From a Woman's Life By Dale Drummond | Copyright, 1914, by the Pres Ublishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) CHAPZER xIx, capital t kee ” PER LX: peor e any large amount,’ R, FLAM told Jack to of '“.yibiain whenever he wished, that | boy, but you wouldnt Wiren aan he had thought he needed a | $50,000 you would want $100,000, and vacation for some time. ‘#0 it would go on." j “But I can't go just now, ‘I know that’s the way with most ” People, moth bi | Bue,” he told me. “I lost a thousand | geraia’ oe it) bout one i Pm dollars yesterday, and I have taken! 1] felt my ip curl, Jack We | on some atock again to-day to try and rebnd genta, that Pd | make up the loss.” ere er stop} to | "*¥ou lost!" 1 exclaimed, annoyed, | of WHAT he was afraid, thinking, ing money. | ae always. “Who told you to buy?” | thinking to brace bin up, Ite “Senator Crispen.” im with cowardice; with caring | “But you promised to tell me when/| More for his own peace of mind, as | represented in not | you had any information on the mare er ee mae t tying we make ret ily, whom he could, #€ he — ist into as — - WELCOMING THE. NEBRASKAN. HE arrival oftthe Nebraskan as the first ship to bring-a cargo of California products from San Francisco to New York through the Panama Canal. was rightly enongh made the , of an interchange‘of congtatulations. The issue calls, how- | omgrd something more than expressions of friendly sentiments a oe way was hardly Sen Francisco is to open next year an éxposition whose influ- is going to affect o much larger trade than that between Cali- and New York: Europe being involved in war, the exposition ‘be dominated by American interests, and in this connection the means all the Americas, continental and insular. Several of the to the south of us are growing rapidly in population, in- and wealth. Their trade, algtedy large, will have s vast ¢ nae " 4 throug! be ag interrupted wi ¥,| Make so inde; ’ aoe iene saking pri poo of the larger f ‘ “but Tae pg the Senator until vaatether ouid nothing mare if Jack, richer part of this increasing trade. Though che takes no off-| = . hageedhiag rides tage im teraay? 20d | Popes, te emeece The “Interest Bearer.” = man around whom this story is written is.at pree- Mildred and they would have lost, when he suid he was afraid of the ia NeW York’s opportunity. ent junior member of the Tank Line just for w Hyer. 1 thought 7 q Temes to illness. really he has lost very little, consid- also, but determined not to let him, stock market, Wasn't. it the stock SUE UNAIEI aoeseeeneeeee firm with which be started WOMAN who had tangoed off | perhaps 1 could make up the thou- ; Not only this, but this view of ering.’ "Susan, 1 : part in the exposition, the display of her products’ by private and =—— | WAAt bave youu boughtT: 1 asked, sied ou io neers Aeon dee ae piled ognalgien Bilal dhae Ay pomena , i So Wags — [iments ot zarny ta) kim aiid for gM fata meet that rivalry with exhibits that will attract South American). To Promotion ‘ Women’s Work in War Time. The World By Sophie Irene Loeb. B bd ore know I was pleased, fearing be would | Market that took all bis father's Copyright, 1914, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), YG rece ie allem Rot tell me some other time. “On, very one that speculates has ew York Evening Work), WOMAN’S CITIZENSHIP AGAIN. a 6. ibaa oie are fifteen pounds of superfluous bas probably will and more, too,|°2#' 8 A PART of the ples in defense of suit brought by Mrs,| clerk” atteen yeare ago, In bis story makes the follow- least gloom on ail the ctiera aia et feeb asked her busband when i¢ yo toid you, 1 think when Sehater| gerald of!” mother persisieds et ER Ines Mitholland Boissovain-for legal services, the defendants | tr* "BO spectacular “jumping” ing; aopesl ries cus trams the vewoaiee we train the other | ake up your Tm uliar disposition, He was bonest and with an energy that will hold it. .San Francisco's expo- Coprrigit. Wie, yy ibe Leow Huelsning Gs | “On, Cosgrove told me to buy some] 4, take home lo NEnglisd Welfare that it has amounted almost a “What in the world is it, then? Mr, train th make up your loss!" 1 grumbled with) 5.) 7, it smiles instead. rep 7 from a low post to a high one. It 11 ii take their cue from the viewpoint of * Ae es allege that after she had héen admitted to the bar she mar-| just the story of @ young mas wh iperkage the) nt mocters sli Gay it wonank you, Suet" Mildred ret i eeenose Shak It to Mr. Pam, Tied « foreigner and thereby forfeited the privilege of practising law 44 the unique idea that he repre- ey most important |ittle child fail, it looks up into its| ; hepa eed plied when I called her “uy Tank , “For heaven's sake, what ts it, im this The plea is said to be based eented invested capital and set about thing that women (Mother's face to see how the fall ha: ; ; ong So nink F was, then?” : country. plea is upon an act of Con-| graqually raising the rate of interest, ng Oe affected her. It i he replied, » on nee oe you Amal “Afraid of himself, dear; of the _ @fets providing that while ehe does not lose any of her property | and adding to the “capital.” eee as Riee S pemmetic wail 5 ’ Jose it te that ee ee eethe. first. thing Jack has that speculating, gainbiing, 1s ge ‘eefights, an American woman who becomes the wife of an unnaturalised | TW young mah was ambitious. He a war is to keep fis face, accompanied by the cry, : RAL ae aa I a Nee returned hotly, @8°)""“Nonsense! He hasn't derei loses her citizenship. wanted, naturally, to increase bis t ives’ and|, You're not hurt!” and consequently = to When a| Well, you needn't get mad about| enough to gamble heavily enough to earning power, And this is the idea hurt him! “4 2 ¢ et mise! fib s+ thelr families in| As our English slster writes, it te biped to at, But don't fore T retorted. “If| “The principl “EB, | Instances of injutice done by the operation of this law are be-| he figured outs the best possible| for the women of the hore te inant 2 Se eae meen lt Leake Patina gon al vetalnd | aud the’ worry ereatent oe P ing frequent. It has been held that a California woman of Amet-| in, eauivalons of lntorect, anna px, | state of health and, above all thing ,| Here are a fow timely hints that may! ~“¢.£.cW4¥ = nothing in the| mel”. yo tena. There + guna ‘. : terest, en ie " vert ? jusan, " Hielegn birth, who wes never in her life out of the United States, lost| cent. om $18,000, In othe? words 1|t? Temaln calm some anaiety, | aciemembar that the child mind 1s| animal kingdom to match him. ee he aM aye , making ft Jack hus malenoreoeed * ie ° abl lous “ a right to vote on marrying’a foreigner resident here. A women of Feerenent £0 tho Grn ap "tavsatmeat, wrory mocan should seriously con: | often aitect its whole after ifs, *"| Wo've never yet heard a man admit| "No, indeed.” 1 replied, fanning 1] front eal of mone) ee bed! birth now in Europe has been held to be a foreigner be- satay Therefore, don't let Uttle Johnnte’s| being afraid during a thunderstorm,| fn iittie cross, too, I guess, enough to build the house wae wore “Now, in order to good | der “how she can best maintain the! nin be flied with ‘ef mause she married « foreigner, even though she has since been divorced invest 1 must yas ae than} beaith of her nerves and the general ell Bim storia ‘ot berolsm nd yet there are # lot of men who| “All right. | I'll forgive you: but) derful. And to make so.much with: ; * and she laughingly| out capital must 4 very prem him. 4 per cent, interest. At ¢ per ceat.(health of her, body, on which this] sorter ie eetebsry eet Svold any have that fear. and rang Ott ant earing: Of couree iknow norkioney ~ largely depen in ne g ebah pcided change tn} the methods of the stock market Tc > Citizenship is of value to women as well ag to men. They should | nes beater pea reat A acc ‘must bring out ber best qualities. I¢/ ,, 00 that if the members of the fam.| “It's always the, strong Ol tee Mildred’ 11 do know that Jack should stop fy discuss the war they do not dis-| who gets drowned, appeared impatient, speculating. He should stop at once, old raves you often hear at this sea-| PROC any disagreement. 1 had! When a man honestly acknow net be deprived of it without: their consent, and marriage does not| to the,firm 1 must yield 6 per cent., or | the head of the household be bright, A quarrel about the war helps no} son, Of course there isn’t 4 particle| thought nothing much of it, but now that he is afrald of what he ts 4 constitute such consen cheerful, kindly and derate, all m ity toto sas ta wrnatae women's) of 800, eee ee tees Gre. im the, Hemme win’ Re ” urbe neutral and most impartial at-| Of truth in it; it is merely one of| I wonde: if Jack were right and the/{t is time that he stopped. of $15,600, : Fights, whether suffragists or antis, to unite in having Congress clear| “In order to get a ‘raise’ I must care nap PY. is timely and important, | titude toward the war is worthy of| those Iles stuck in the amber of/ Someraos were troubled over money) own sake, and for ths, auke of thoes lew of this wrong as soon as possible, Tepresent a bigger investment. If 1|not only in the warring countries but| cultivation, no matter how personal | handed down hearsay. ‘Then, thinking of tho large order! love him. Urge him to stop, Ba ae ba am raised to $20 a week then I am,| Fight Here under the Stare and| opinion may lean, — just left with Lorraine, and! and then live more simply. You will to the firm, an investment of 924,000.) Stripes Every home bas the war at Don’ Sale war when you visit sick! ‘There's a man over on Long Isiand | ¢,, imousine Ned had given her! be happier in the end, I’ THOSE SPECTR. ‘Then I must again make my rate of |""rne tamtly tadie| posible cnywhere © | % little as! who has a fine pair of elk antlers in | on her birthday, I dismissed the Idea| it was aa I feared it might be, 0: AL RUSSIANS. interest yield or than the 4 per| asin sigcussion sr orbing toplocthe| Don't hurt your foreign friend py| his library. “Get ‘em veurmey vale Cee, Tere tener cage | Morar eae Qing, te get me to per HE wonderful army of “speetres wan and pale” that beleaguered orheg eo Tr must sarh ach raise With, so much everlasting| taking sides with the country hejasked him. ‘Who? Moe? Naw, ther knew by this time that Jack|in the market. She certainly woud Mo! x calamity recorded, the pessimist is | OPPO! No good can result from} couldn't hit a flock of hay wagons speculated. It had been impossible] accomplish nothing with me. , the walle of Prague, according to Longfellow, were not more| tity ane ales ee [Lets a =~ readliy erent Ee. i’ Cho danke be Ma ergy family funds, bur| With ® rock,” he replied. “t pent So een IE TT ee encased tat ie Te OANA. poeaily on hie eal ; smysterious than the array of Russians that various reliablo| “Unique Idea, meare ? But, as | %d% and thule create fear and ap-| pot so that they Till realise that wag |‘em.” “All mel are Nati tant go, | accounted for his increasing nervous- ne “Sepere6ns nave seen disembarking at some port in the misty north of pall ob tas ange “Hot cule thee te pagel atthe household, Such | If Your nuapend cents ths fetore, sane coment ij . } be ly thet, endeavor to a! fears poe poring bah at ‘aio the length of Great Britain and | am bis rise proves, he “druve it home. EO toes to bo de. | spiring him with the thought Rat se vanishing into the dar - === === | plored. It should be discouraged. og . °, " 2 the family depressed ‘ nay: tter how terrible the war is, #: The London News says if they do not exist, “the ubiquity of the Hits From Sharp Wits. mo fo vomaine—-WE ARE NOT AT ee erent can't nein’ dead nels tumors” would be more wonderful than the existence itself would WAR HERE. diers in foreign lands by’ mourning i In order to keep tranquil, so that! here. Decorate the J wade and if that be true, we have an answer to the once famous ques-| ing mone ultimately: lands’ ey" aha| every member of the family’ may wo | fathor than the gra R gudion of « rural debating socioty: “Which is the more marvellous, tho Sotcmccdinany dearest on with him everyday activities just ° i jaui oer ag if there were no war, the im-| iq, ‘ala _ Sidiosyncrasies of genius or the ubiquities of space?” If those Rus-| Heer cured an Indian horse of rook. | Bortant thing 18 to cultivate the spirit | Try the general routine of a Potians are'reall: of PEACE in the home. activity as ii Lorre were no war. |loosened the jawa of men,—Toled 7 enagenins has overcome space. If not, some equal genius has established | Blade. © | alowed the We tO ne or a CRIME DF CHEE RATES ness. = tl ‘Where will you stop, Jack?” she! was determined that mother should ed him one evening. know no more of my affairs than wap in a Bullding and Loan Asso-| clear TS hever, touch the market! Tne " | elear I'd never, touch the market) 1, too, was AFRAID! Afrald she jon; and it's the right kind of (in "Sut can't wet anywnere near| mighy cnete that on the margin we have. It costs| did. Juck see things as abe so much to live that I haven't tne! {To Re Continued) You know the standard old joke about the city man who gets the bug tu have a poultry ranch, who finally pollinate ital AO i Matacic. ects it, and then gons onthe rocks| Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers @ and Inck of kno ae gal ya ‘ ‘e! . Every- a be + C" writes: “A iy in the W ference in| P®ying me attention abe cask ee Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, be. | oves me. But he we visited the-thicken ranch of a6 D&~/ about the good tim e has had wit ly in transit from Archangel to the seat of war, some |{*™,, et why not! , It has often |"; know of several women who have|: AND, ABOVE. KEEP PEACE ee ¢ to how the future activities of t! THE CHIME OF CHEER RATHER fami New York man who, until he started {i tween husband] girls in the country and tenn @ new record in the way of ubiquitous rumor. Hope as well as love ts blind to| War Will affect thelr family and its THAN THE DIRGE OF DISCORD. | ti" non tayout five years ago, had and wite affect| "comfortable, What shall I one things that it would rather not see; never seen a chicken except in a their married ‘he young man is tactless, to eay else bald barbers could not sell hair ultry window or on a market stall. the least. Why don’t you talk to him ‘ restorer. ‘. ak year out of his B happiness? about the good times you have en- Jungle Tales for Children couple of motor Since a pleasant|Joyed with other members of his sex? —By Farmer Smith—— care, tucks h ¢ under his arm | 11 married lite de-|Beach Manners. and goes to pe when he feels like | i it, and all like that, And he used to * pends largely OD; “BE. M.” writes: “Is it proper for a be a dry goods clerk at $8 a week! So; congeniality of) young lady to dance at Wedding Anniversaries. Children are so kind t. their par- Copyright, 1914, by tho Prese Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), here's @ nail in THAT comicality! tastes, there ts\# YOUNg man wearing Ai neck See ‘To the ‘editor of The Evening World: An army of the little dears] ¢¢ Jews began the Baby Baboon| “You need not get mad about it,” wish powals It i done, but nut by the Gicest gta, ‘The man who says he can break a habit whenever Le wants to usually doesn’t want to.—Albany Journal, oe de the sacrifice of taking father ‘ong day, as he settled himself |#!4 the Baby Baboon, moving nearer — We know a man who, during his and mother to the circus to see the celebrated only every fifth year as his companion, wife's abse ke upon a bundle bility of trouble! “Mr, M." writes: Ra leaped A ad ie a ha _ Tet animain—Milwaukee Sentinel, on the bamboo tree, “Simmy,| When Jimmy was not looking the| of the lov: Written to her | ing union of two persons separated| Man do at's weddimer™ nowd & beat cit = x + CDE Tory the Rditor of The Evening W e239 ‘where do you think?” ’ (Baby Baboon stuck a thorn in Jimmy’s| during the court “Gee! I was | |? t Often—not| ,, He looks after the ring and attends teenth, crystal; twentieth, china.! “4 chicago friend tells me that there} TRE most dangerous of enemtes 1s| “I think at home sometimes and |foot, there with the salve in those days! | by a long term of years. the bridegroom, id twenty+fifth, silver, the next being| are more telephones used % | one who pretends to be ... friend, “Ouch!" shouted Jimmy. “What/ I'll just use that dope again!” And he | always—a husband of fifty and a cme golden wedding at fifty years. My | than there arein New York” te ae +8. 8 . on eat" LO Se | SS ore well’ soremiied the, Bab Baboo mai pal ae Stee Ce tan i? nar oe he sammeee OY) RB writes: | 'T know @ boy ‘andl u Re; p “Well,” ie y M, | his letters to her at the summer resort | have fow interests In common, whom I feel ery nat eck aa ene et Fork Ine fa A et oe Pm ecaLne So pisare everinecy fea bes-|”' “didn’t. mean, that,” replied the log you' think only in your it| where bis wife was vacationising—| It's a fairly that per- eel gure likes me. But we head bany Journal. ae i Af there la 6 celebration for that | right? ta righ’ Baie pleige, JR aed th min Four hain aha at rouldart hurt you when I stick you) and she never knew the diference! | sons near ‘the shaker aiedaiin epee Bo . don't know how to meet oe) othe juestion,’ looking at Nr) friend be together, unuauy safer for| out belng introduceay’ ta right,” Jima-| When a wife begins to suspect her! the husband to be a few years the| Certainly not. Every new TT guese 1 sil over, do Just] man she also to expect | senior of the wite, @ Woman! tance should br ma i en nth <n yp yo ogni pa ho te el the te a cnn Malla tl act

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