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a ‘ ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Pudlished Daily Mrcept Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 03 te 3 ‘ik Row, New York. PULITZPR, Prosident, 6% Park Row. J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 6% Park Row, JOSFPH PULITZER, Jr. cretary. 68 Park Row, Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Clane Matter, Bubdscription Rates to The Svening| For England and the Continent and ‘World for the United States All Countries in the International and Canada, tal Union. $3.50] One Year. 99.78 .20! One Month. ‘ ’ TOBACCO AS A WAR SUPPLY. ‘ PPEAL made by Crown Prince Wilhelm to a Berlin newspaper A to collect large quantities of tobacco and cigars for the men : of his army and to forward them as quickly as possible serves _by the importance of his personality as well as by its urgency to +direct attention to the part tobacco has in what may be deemed the ‘necessary supplies of armies. It is the more interesting because of ‘the nearly wholesale sweeping away of liquor from army rations, Early in the war Lord Kitchener forbade sending any kind of intoxi- cating liquors to British soldiers in France, the French Government stopped the sale of absinthe, and the Ruesian Government is reported -to have imposed total prohibitioh throughout the empire. Yet all are seemingly as eager for tobacco and cigars as is the Crown Prince of Germany. It was believed of old that whiskey prompted to strife, ewhile tobacco inclined to gentleness. This appears to have been an ‘error. Modern warriors fight on the weed and save whiskey to cele- "brate peace. - PUBLIC AUCTION FOR FOODSTUFFS. - HE suggestion of Borough President Marks that it would be T well to provide at the free markets a municipal auction for the sale of produce not disposed of during market hours merits consideration. It promises to put a stop to an evil that has Fong been practised not in this city only but throughout the United States in all large citics. Over and over again complaint has been made of the practise of ,deatroying in one way or another nearly all kinds of perishable foods that could not be sold promptly at market prices. Fruits and many ‘kinds of vegetables, fresh and sound, but of second quality, have in *that way been destroyed to keep up the market price when they should have been placed where persons of small means could buy ‘them. The issue is bigger than that of a local market. It is one “that if successfully solved in New York would be taken up on like, in many other cities where the evil has existed for a long time. MUNSTERBERG ON THE RUSSIANS. ROF. MUNSTERBERG’S argument that Amoricans should side with the German against the Slav because “the German culture as « is active and productive; the Russian ut its best passive and un- | Re Short, all classes of Russians are quite active in this generation and $ “a "superstition as are the Gerinans to create a Germany redeemed from Re Ae ipe Irish demonstration which waa] Btates hi fas yw -oreative,” recalls that a little more than a century ago much the same fargument was used by the French against the Germans. It was then ;asserted and believed that French genius was active and practical, | while that of the Germans was dreamy and metaphysical. Indeed Mme, de Stael took that as an accepted truth in drawing up her noted Aivision of power giving the British dominion over the sea, France ‘over the land and (iermany over the-air. | The charge was not true of the German then, nor is it trae of , the Slav now. Tourgeniev, indeed, complained that all Russian aspi- rations for reform ended in smoke, but the Slay has moved far since then. There was nothing passive about Tourgeniev himself, nor about ‘Tolstoi, nor is there about the living writers, nmsicians and painters | who are making Slav genius a force in every department of the world | ofart. There is nothing passive in Russian democracy that is forcing its way to constitutional government, nor in Russian womanhood that *holds advanced positions in every feminine movement of the time. In aire az likely to create a new Russia redeemed from despotism and | qmilitarism and Kaiser worship. f Letters From the People | “vhanke The Evening World for, army and y who have been Pel ty. awarded me of honor for most Wo the Heitor of The Evening World @istinguished gallantry in action dur- ‘@ ‘The committee which had charge/ing any war in which the United been ongaged, t Manhattan Casino on Sept. 8 ®wahes to thank you for the valuabte American Peace Society. assistance you rendered. The meet- | Tv the Baitor of The brening Work! ging was burriedily organized on the} When and where was the American wal from resigns ote bial $e Peace Society organized? Richard M: ee, M. P., and the ADVOCATE. mbers of the Various Irish societion| New York, May 8, 1838, taking part—viz.: the Irish National rClub, Accient Order of Hibernians.|n, woe toe eee ee ea ea qbeagus| , Which was formed first, the Triple Vand affiliated societies—had no noti- |Alliance or the Triple Entente? @eation except through tho press. L. DEV. «=. That the meeting was such a splen- A Machine Problem. ofa Cov egand was due laravly * the | To tie Raivor of The Evening World: courtesy of your paper in giving] Will you publish this problem so/ ac Prominence to the advance no- that I can get the right answer? | j ‘Thanking you for many past favors, plant so" figares out yarycrcs nti , We remain, in behalf of the Irish citt- | hait mukes a machine and a half in mens, of New York, yours very sin-/a day and a half. At what rate " would machines be made by ninety . * STEPHEN MIFARLAND, | men? wpa resident. rv. ‘The Great Lakes. JOHN P. HAYES, JEREMIAH LAW Ty the Editor of The Breuning Work! ‘4 Which of the Great Lakes {s the hegten deepest, and which Is the larger Bo the Editor of The Evening World Lake Huron or Lake Michigan? Does the United States army have N. 8. W. or,anization called the “Medal of! Lake Michigun is the deepest by 800 Legion,” and what does Mabie, fash, ie greatest depth being 1,80 bership in it signify? feet. Huron conios next, with a depth , nee" poy scour. of 1,000 feet Huron has a sienily Yes. The Legion ts composed of greater area than Michigan—merely a Officers and enlisted men of the matter of 600 square feet. Novelist Earned $22.50 in 5 Years. LTHOUGH Booth Tarkington,|name upon beginning his literary «day is|career, Booth was the maiden name A fue Bronsier balinert tovday 18\ of his mot He graduated from one of America’ at J |sarient a niversity in 1893, His Gceases, be had a long and diMecult) earliest ambition was to become av ‘climb to his present position, Mr,! lllustrator, but after thirty-one of hi> | pen drawings had been rejected, with Parkington biuself ts responsible for) oii one acceptance, and. that one the siatement that the financial re- bringing him only « few dollars, he wards of the first five years of bis] decided that as an i!ustrator he was literary endeavors amounted to just] a failure, and turned his pen to words , OF w littl instead of pictures. He wrote short mar. He refused to bo discourage: articles, plays, poet and | Wes.” Ba as: Mag azine, CAN You COFFEE - Eausqocens A bose BEY; ‘Spaguern ) (Ouve CHICKEN FEED HAR (IT LEMONS 40 CENTS ~ FLOUR. rg H. Olu ONE UP THAT WiLL} } DISTRESS! y : AS GONE UP ESSING QNE DOLLAR = 5p ‘Too OOST THE PRICE Beueve NE | 39 CENTS & Pound \/4 S OF CHICKENS For PoRTERHOUSE - ~~, STEAK. AND SUGAR, HAS DOUBLED Copyright, 1014, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Erening Worl), Y DAUGHTER, I charge thee, consider the Simple Flirtation. M For, unto a man, It is an idle pastime, but unto a woman it is @ Work of Art, wherein the success or failure consisteth in the skill with which the “Finishing Touches” are put on. Lo! ANY woman can begin a flirtation; but only a “Hearticulturiat” can END one to her own glorification and honor. Behold, when a Foolish Damsel observeth that love {s upon the wane, she is straightway cast down. When she noteth that a man’s eye a0 longer Nghteth but droopeth at her approach; when he cometh late and departeth RLWAYS early; when he yawneth behind his hand and kisseth her “dutifully,” she erteth in her heart: | “Go to! I shall play the INDIFFERENT; I shall pay him in his OWN coin.” ) | She refuseth his invitations; she breaketh dates; she is not “at home” when he calleth. =— TORTo! | She seeketh to rekindle the flame by arousing his JEALOUSY. STUMPED FRom do SHEL: | She chattereth of “Other Men;” she danceth madly with callew “Te 61 AND SCOTCH youths, and inviteth ALL her reserve staff to call. Whiley FROM But a wise Damsel goeth softly. 1.15 "To 1.60 | Behold, at sight of him, she becometh suddenly CORDIAL, | Her lips drop honey, and “Politeness” is her middle name. | \ { She observeth not that his kisses have become few and perfunotory. " tly. and her words are full of PLATOMIO and accepteth ALL his excuses 6: Yea, her eyes are full of smil\ | FRIENDSHIP! | She seeth not & slight, nor seeketh a way to repay ft; she holdeth her | peace and abideth her time. Sho PLAYETH the fish. ‘When he seeketh to provoke a quarrel, a Foolish Virgin snappeth et the bait, and swalloweth it. She is UNDONE! s , But a wise damsel) saith, “It 1s naught, it is naught!” And lo, his words are broken against him. Hoe knoweth not where he standeth; for he hath NO “excuse.” And, behold, when he least expecteth {t, she snappeth his bonds, and | dismisseth him lightly, saying: “Alas, I WOULD that I could go on dallying thus, forever for ft hath been such a pleasant acquaintance! But now, I must think of SERIOUS things! Yea, 1 must say Ta-tal” She handeth him his hat. And lo, in his astonishment, he PROPOSETH! | Verily, verily, a Foolish Damsel droppeth a filrtation as a bomb frem | an airship, but a wise damsel droppeth {t as a kitten upon a down pillew. « For she knoweth that the way to a man’s heart is NOT through bis stomach, nor through his vanity, but through his OBSTINACY. And in love, as in war, it is not valor, but strategy, which winneth, Selah. | CHAMPAGNE IS GOING UP OLD SPoRT BIO More A CASE AUL PRuGs YE GONE UP AND SPATS HANE GONE UP Too ISN'TIT Awrut | Chapters From a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond Copyright, 1914, by the Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Brentng Wortt?, CHAPTER LXXXI. Loe pere-7ea let Mary go. ACK and mother appeareé|Noran’ | St Slons nicely delighted to see us when ‘0, indeed! I'll not think of euch at the end of the month I returned hotly. “Mary ia we returned home, a brown, xpert waitress, mother, mae healthy looking quartette— because of her. You for Norah had also improved by the| know we entertain a great deal tm the |change. Jack looked thin and tired,|@eeson. I expect to more thas ever thi tely must | but I sald nothing about it; instead | pao, wine Nateay Satine |I kept him interested with the ac- think you might find another just. To the Employer The Dower ot Beauty of Women The World By Marie Montaigne ‘count of our vacation. «| #9 good if you let her go until you ~ . " needed tress,” mother protested B Carence L. Cullen. By Sophie Irene Loeb. ‘Now, Jack, show me the garage,| Migiy. © wall be - Copyright, 1014, by the Frew Hrublishing Co, (The New York krening World,) I'm crasy to see it!” I said to him| uy to talk oe ‘ Comment, BS: York neolng World) NO. 8.—Beautifying the Ears. Comore. 1814, 1 The. Heme Fubluting Go. | directly dinner was over. I couldn't do it! and 1 ended the a 1D you, fair lady, ever realize how much charm is conveyed to a head — . “Well, come alon, and he led the| discussion by going into another HE man who follows the: prog- ond face by a well-shaped, well-set ear? And have you noticed how HE public! wi Je of the tom. ress of the European war on & T bad made my plans—in @ measure employment; “Oh, it’s lovely!" 1 exclaimed, “It ls|—for the winter, and did not intend bureau as it 4s nice as the Leas ane | they should be tnterfered with. I had think you are a wonder, Jack, really | made several new acquaintances dur- well as other qo!” ministering to bis vanity in the! ing my say in the mountaine thee dl sreatly protruding or ugly cars detract from the appearance of a map which he has pasted up) woman? in his room can} Tho ears should set close to the head and be of ize that harmonizes and does make with that of the face. Ears that are . elther too large or too amall are ob- such agencies, it way 1 knew would | wished to entertain, and to have en- OB ged . jectionable, and large ears are partic- ia reported, are Later tn the tertain and in other ways I had h ‘ p pit) ularly deplorable on a woman. besteged with ap. |!) noticing DIAS nen 8 aay eeance ie Weick sad. ‘ x Protruding ears are often caused |f pilcunta, many of | “UNO hat wo are back, when are Some fellows by the Peed Soeohine. a sniey 3 whom are wdmen. | you going to take your vacation?” te school and go after her. ike to try to hair and washing face during 8 The cause of; “If it weren't for my promise to not spare Norah, so that was stampede their childhood. The ear is poked out and this, it ts claimea,| Mother, I wouldn't take any. But I reason for keeping Mary. 1 dy auffi- ¥ kept in that position until the soft, \ if be {| don't suppose she'll le off,” with) Mother said nothing more, but aid already . ‘ cartilage grows firm with increasing | is due to the fact! a loving glanco in her direction. all she could to help me witn sewing, conte ipo years and deformity results, so far as| WoPWEWMME OES ‘that many fac-| “Indeed I will not!" mother told| mending, preserving, &c. riends pre- ” 64 She had beauty is concerned, and surely ugli- tories are reduc-| Dim. “You need it more than ever.’ mended and patched everything she dieting what @ ; | ness in a deformity, and & sad Kind tng tno numberof employees on a0| peon’ very hot and. trying if Inia] ond 7 find, that necded atten hard winter it’s going to be. Wi . at that, count of the war. While such a state| Jack's looking mo badly to that. BUt| tended to throw eeene Tae e ane ¥ nN winters around this ; The illustration shows how a when we were alone and 1 bad qu old ber aes s0ReN) ADE. Wi a aaa y y bandage may be arranged over pro. | of atfaira is pathetic, it Is also pointed) when. we were slone and } bad. lawshingly. It would ‘save Temien thAL Were Senetly” bath : ; j truding ears until they grow back |OUt that women are the wo: why he bad sent mo no word about |some fall underwear, but the saving LT M2 aay close to the head and add their quota 4 boy ang | What he had ds T concluded !t wae} on cared pire my expenticares Te Stand near any shop window that Be tee of charm to the face. Sometimes &| one pinces where the unemployed be hen foo’ that's why! he| !t didn't count, has mirrors in it and you'll catch ‘ 4 tuck ts taken in the back of the ear! ian can spend the day, and ¢ 4. “And, Sue, I'm going to wns then proposed that she go more men sneaking eelf-satisfied ‘ to remove superfluous flesh, when &/ night, where he can find shel retract that promise. 1 will do the my wardrobe and freshen he Ives in the looking . . aimilar bandage becomes necessary| from cold and rain, w! best I can for you at all times, but it] UP the things I had worn while I was glances at themse! I G- “ta | at night even get food free, th upsets me—makes me more nervous “: T gladly consented, as they BAe Case women: ; 7 am The arrangement of the bandage| places open to the unemployed |—to think I bave to tell evel Je [eadly needed it. She was astontshed wi be f th irl whose 7 must not be tight, but firm, and this} woman {s very small. She cannot | thing I do. Luck has deserted me, /at the quality of my cloth! hat's become of the gir ing, as another | Well as at the quantity, But the enly {s insured by passing the folds prop-| spend the day in a saloon, She | anyway. I have just taken anot . Miked to imagine that she'd make 4) 19 e AT rRrING PROTRUDING® bands which pass over the head fol jie HOC NY ine Mane cannot | rin a single bill, ft costa too much |they were of such fine material.” Pictorial finish like Elaine? s over the neckband, The usual thin} },, in 4 street the price of a |torun this ranch, I wish I had nevor But the styles change so quieRty, bandaging 1s used, as any heating material kept long over the skin ts not * ba » that the material oun ar coe attompted to build! mother, ¢ ‘doesnt Recently we overheard a young wo-| good fof it, nor comfortable to the wearer. Thor it ie esnerted that many at tite rede. enary reount id rach, only that you can man of twenty-three expatiating in a Another thing that is necessary to keep the ears beautiful ts to {nsure| housekeepers who employ servants not going 'y get the correct styles from the condemnatory tone on tife stage in| circulation of blood in the lobes. Pink ear lobes always add wonderfully to| are doing away with one servant or ‘Bip, future cpereliony t hired one Modistes that use the fine material.” wencral. It appears that she knew| the attractiveness of a face, and little rubs and slaps on the ear, just enough | more in order to save money. In the either reproaches or questions, Per- ail about the subject. Somebody men-|'? warm it up and not enough to be felt by the delicate inner ear are main this 1s somewhat false economy, cel 63} ’ haps I saw he would not stand for pecially for a woman who Is not tioned Richard Mansfield. The young| ctent for bringing fresh blood to the surface and keeping the ear bright them, So, “You will feel differently when you d healthy and its texture fine and attraetive, pressed for means, lea woman had never heard of him. SRS, RODIERP: ORG: AHA VORENPS SAP BOR RENEE ceninaieeeknsiaemremions cole it, may neem Iaudahlo for the! nave had a Uttie Feat” was all sald. | Susan, X shouldn't think pect its F Wi T i rhequer, she does not perhaps realize| Bother a vacation! I haven't thi to How many men are capable of) Hits From Sharp its. | he Last Khedive. openers P heart to go. C Judging as to the value of their own efforts? We happened to be with J.| A man never knows why they call, dartley Manners, the young Irisn-|!t “Labor Day” until he has carried | English playwright, who was writing|@ picnic basket eight miles through a that by turning such a servant away | ly o0° Fomised and you must. Plan t alwaye be a clerki® in times of need SHE Is ing tO} +> go right away, so you will escape | snapped, “Wouldn't TS Khedive of Egypt, who is just | 100d the labor market and also bur-| a ittle of the hot weather.” had my way! reas ty 0 forty years old, is tn trouble. | ening the State with more mouths to!” Nothing more was said, but tho|style I menn. Nowadays if @ ext day when he came homo he told | hasn’t styl! . women plays when he was twelve years sun-lit cocklebur ficld,—Hoston Tran- Hin Magyar wife deserted} In it not more worthy to retain such | Us that’ he and Tom Gilson (a mun |in Now York, T means eee atta te on the night when “Peg o' My Heart” | seript. him, and his country, so many|@mployees even at a little sacrifice|1) the office) were going to spend ean. re, was produced in Atlant¥, City, An- & 2 @ : course, It doesn't make mneh and thus assuine YOUR share of the hing down at Barnegat. Th responsibility in the human hive, es- | Ticcines wus trifling, the rent of the |coemce, Dut here most peo! Europeans think, may in time follow other of bis plays, a very good one| “Push,” says a modern philosop! pecially in times when such need is|fint divided between them amounted [you iptv our clothes called “The Indiscretion of Truth,” | “should be the big word in the vocab- | @™!t- had failed miserably a short timede-| ulary of every best There is no| Abbas Hilmi, probably the last of to véry little, he explained to mother tle for sore, “Tm afraid I'm on another send such thing as ‘pull’ applied to bodies. | Egyptian tulers, came to the throne surely to continue in reply to her intereated questioning, igment, my dea: thetr one," whisper anners, intently) The engine never pulls a train, but colle; y much as poe: “Susan, you must contrive som ‘Jack Itkes me to too! watching the performance of "E pushes it—the coupling of the engine |i". 10% fresh from college at way to see that Jack do ‘Of course, But 1 think Fees And “Peg” is going to make him one|Atways oxtenda behind that of the| Vienna and from wanderings over| by a different route, such ay clomoly | ts'he soma to be doing, too sensible to want you to of the richest playwrights In the] car following and docs actually shove| Europe. He found bis ancient land] supervising the ordering and prepura-| to te, ape people that are in totaly Sige world, if it hasn't done that already. | it forward.” But the pessimist wil'| occupying a peculiar position among| tion of food, constantly preaching and | that you ent positions from the o1 © ocow: “On, I'm auch tched ». | Rot be silenced—he only shifts tol ine nations of the world practising reasonable economy, and | could help, I. pies. Your wardrobe must have coat’ he tan Buch @ wretched corre. | Who's back of him?’—Pittsburgh | ‘© 2 rather carry on a war pe & small fortune"—not even then spondent!” women are often heard] gun, Nominally it was a province of the} WASTE. bd them down considerably, and still be alizing in the least how mueb it aia to may, often in a tone indicating that eee Turkish Empire. Actually it was! In this way, by keeping things to-| comfortable? Suppose—at least while cost nor how extravagant I had aa thay paless that to be Feiner a merit! ne way to keep busy—do unto| autonomous under the Khedive. At] gether and each assuming his share | ———————__ --________ "amt been, natend OF | & powerful symptom of others as you would have others do|the same time, it depended for of responsibility, he or she does not haps by such methods, with real hon-/ young shoulders, and their p a unto you existence upon the European pow add to the burdens of the community | est intention, employees might be|spirits are often kept alive’ by tee ‘These are the russet-and-gold-and- 2 e 8 e@ his among them being Great large. And in the workaday world | wijting to work for even a little lesa| feeling that they are going to crimson autumnal days when the cal.| “The fellow who enters into a joint ;. With the passing of the|the employer does not perhaps realize! for a period rather than LOSE thelr] their Job, so that others may not eufe culating chap Who has postponed hie| debate with himself,” remarked the Turkish sovereignty has be-| that by laying off women to save a| work altogether. fe vacation until the most beautiful sea-| Man on the Car, “always gets the nore and more shadowy; tl Uttle cash now, he disorganizes hi gon of the year has it all over his|decision,"—Toledo Blade. powers of the Khedive have been more | shop or factory to such a degr ° e ver, and now his Income from but for five years practically rights and book royalties puts hem were od, and the one byl the head of the street}or two acceptan barely paid his ; paper and ink bill, witb nothing left , Mr. Tarkington was born in 1869 in| over for postage. rin, ts Sete Tale t Fame, when it came, arrived with wuddecness, r. ‘There are many women who can-| Consideration by the e: And oe oat not readily fill into other plac women ts pleaded for, office martyrs who scrambled to grab and more restricted; the influence of |it may cost him MORE in thi There are older women who have should be heeded. As Stevenson their time tn rainy and humid July. Swallowing one's pi is always| other powers has gradually decreased | when he comes again to reorgan! ked at one thing for so many ponsibility Rravitates to him He followed by a very severe attack of| and that of Great Britain has become| Is it not wiser, in such cases of that can shoulder it.” This is the Somehow we don't remember until] mental indigestion. paramount; and now the time is mergency, to consult with employees, ry|for the individual employer to . 8 the service, it ip too late what a b: leved to be rapidly approaching wh y your cards on the table by telling] difficult, if not alin iT his worth in the comm 00 ate at a bad break it is Preah peg ry unt me a full-fledged | them exactly your troubles, and ask- earnest endeavor to hel; ry Pert loity pee eces hs a Shas aytery English dependency, a part of the|ing their HELP, so that youmaycon- There are many girls who have the conditions of those sp Me f: ; & prejudice.—Deseret Nowa, great British kimpire. tinue your work at less cost? Pere burdens of whole make bis wealth , “i e "ys