The evening world. Newspaper, November 5, 1914, Page 16

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CROPPER RTOS Rie cae ee aT AER ee RP The Evening World Daily Magazin TP VOLUME 06..........ccsseccssseeesseenesseee NOs 10/606 A HARD TIMES ELECTION. OST of all, it was a hard times election. Nothing ever helps & party out of work like the hard times argument. What | started hard times doesn’t in the least matter, or whether) times actually exist. Enough if the fear of them is there. Directly you can make any considerable section of the country pinched and uneasy about business, you have the trustiest of with which to pry the party in power out of ite seat. In the lar view there is always @ chance that the ekies will olear if the; come in. In the West, where big harvests thinned the hard times cloud ‘$e & haze, the Democrats have little to complain of. Im the Eastern industrial States the Republicans have loudly “Wamed the tariff and the Democratic party for every atom of dis- fort and distress in sight. The result is before us: New England, w York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio set out to eweep tho jises clean of Derflocrate. ", Now maybe the country will cheer up and settle down to busi- | dees. The sovereign will hae decreed what it felt wee best for itself ind there is a Jot of calm and reassurance in feeling the trick is done. |) Meanwhile business is calling, markets are beckoning and world Gommerce is waiting for us. Let's put away politics and pitoh in. 7 ian aiéapeen The Progressives are home agaia, bless ‘em! parents are too wise to lecture the prodigals. eee pepe UNITED THEY FALL. OMAN SUFFRAGE derived cold comfort from Tuesday's proceedings. The cause lost in six out of seven States where it was an important issue, Ohio, Missouri, Nebras- North and South Dakota and Nevada all rejected it. Ta Missouri, where defeat was particularly crushing, the euffrage 1e0 wes mized up with the liquor question, and the anti-Prohibition- : en all their forces and soyted the enemy. e, Ut was 0 bad day for too. Arisons rejected it by heaviest vote ever polled in the State. Ohio resolved not to be . Is California the “wets” won against the grimmest kind of « rehibition movement. Tp view of all the returns, Prohibition and Suffrage may well eye Other askance, United, they soem to fall and fall had. Di- each might have a better chance. ‘ — pe “weouvies to again tm oruption, Relieving Italy's pent-up feelings, maybe. The G. 0. P. ———ap i" AS IN THE MOVIES. HERE were sixteen men prisoners in the prison van. Thecourt otticer’s list called for only fourteen. So when the lot got out in the courthouse yard in Brooklyn one of the extra two ly declared that he was taking hie companion to court and both darted through the gate. _ 1s wasn't o “film,” but o real transfer of real prisoners. The two 8 }who got away were notorious crooks, jewelry and cigar store rob- with records for blackjeck and revolver work. With o supple wrist and obedient muscles a man may wriggle out jhandcaff. But that a wagonload of prisoner? should be shipped ee casvally that the man who receives them doesn't know how started or how many ought to arrive makes the jall authorities slagularly foolish. When we see euch things in comic opera our thies go joyously with the fugitives. ——- -— 42 WwHy? Last year the housewives of the mode! towa of Montclair, 1%. J, went to schoo! to learn cooking and house management. + imto those who profess to be cookt and such. The mistress of a house boasts that finde Teal happiness in proving ft. But the fe paid to be @ cook not only finds no joy im being a cook, but resents being a cook at all, and takes no pains to improve herself, We wonder if sending wer to schoo! will ber. ‘ {t seems that any effort to improve domestic /, @ervice fo this country ie bouud to be hopeless uati! we have ‘We don't want menials in thie land, But why should the average household helper take oo little sattefaction in being a ‘+ ‘good helper? eLetters From the People oe | Wemac'’s Werk a Ne, 4 Fair of The Brewing Ward | To the Maitor of The Breing World h 1 SB motice tha: a woman in an inter-| Does an is plow in’ your paper takes # little fing | ination ot cee nae creed or denem. B® Well known American woman, {0 hold office as PF ying: Mer own career ap the man. |UAited States? ef @ househvid has evidently left if With plenty of apare time to wrne | pia: end entl-suftrage | and found a college.” Anti- Reaver objects to a woman ber spare time to public far as circumstances allow. seems to me to ba it woman's earning her Outside of her home, be-; t of things in such comes second and his | baby boy and girl? of; Hartford, Conn. Gunday. ‘Tv the Editor of The Brening World: Man's. | resident WILLIAM ¢. Meaning of “Rh. 8, V, PH ‘To the Edtum of The Reming World: “R. \the French vous plait;" ewer.” Bine fer Bey, Piek fer Girt, To the Editor of The Brening Wortd t On what day did Oot. 17, mt, fall? . B Nene Universally Observes, ‘Tu the Kéiler of The Krowung World: ‘A . from eligibility | of the) Will you please expiai 4 ve FF savicin the mosaing jean abbreviation ‘of ndes a'i| What are the correct colors for a aM. The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Gxppetght, Wd, ty Tho Poms Publishing On, (Tee how Yers Bening World). 66] UT where te thie old soldier's widew “Ob, "Mella, as you call her, is the soldier's widow you've been talking {oft Mrs, Jarr inquired. Jerr never liked to be " by anybedy. “If it's any- thing disagreeable, out with it!" had @ motte of Mrs. Jarr’s mother. ber Mre. Jerr bad inberited an antipathy to being “ “Bhe wears carpet slippers,” whis- | Dered Ivene Cackleberry. ; “Juat the same, you got to hand it to her that ehe walked out every day ; to the Old Soldiers’ Home for three months because the Superintendent | had promised abe should erry the Or Mr. Blod- | gor explained. the old | soldiera get awful cranky as a gen- | eral toing when young women come | around wanting to be their widows | for the pension from a@ grateful coun- try; #0 the ladies on the eligible list | Keep out of eight till the | too far gone to shoo her and | later away. fo If ‘Melia hi feet, forget she got t nd $4 a mont! Ban toad Bh, Hits From Sharp Wits. The reason some wives don't have | occasion to doubt their husbands ts that (hey never believe anything they ony. nd fe that he is afraid the left | might torn State's evidence.—Phila- | delphia Inquirer, ee knowing themselves tie efforts to \ehift the | The hunter who goes in search of |trouble never comes home empty handed.—Indianapolis Star, ee ° A loud voice is the poorest means to assert authority, unless it be over the ignorant.—-Albany J eee rai for mother; it's a fact. he ny credit,” says Dad|ing nigh’ ” a — SENS ons alco heals eee ee rsda POSOOOEECEDEEEEES SERS SSESEOSEORES Mrs. Jarr, in Exile, Is Acquiring A Brand New Stock of Experience 9OSSOSSS9S9S9S09S 99999999: Mrs. Blodger explained. “We the second floor to her. It costs her more to have a whole floor than just a room; but it looks good in her aMfdavit when she applies for The’ Radiogoniometer By Jack MONG the many inventions which have created world sur- prises during the flagration in Europe is undoubtedly figure largely in future naval actions ars the name of “Radiogoniom- but this imposing title merely hides a very useful instrument that | determines with apparent ease the distance and direction of a ship send- ing out wireless messages. It will be to battleships what the periscope ta to the submarine. The value df such an instrument, even to the uninitiated, van be seen af wlance, With ite aid a co:nmander in, by @ single operation and calow over the precise locality of > he is desivous of at- ading, the moment suc! to use its wirvleay trang ‘This te only one of tle many usee it can be put to, ite utility bein, equally us valuable for defensive a offensive purposes, when in con- junetfon with the ela @ codes that have been stan in all} y, navics. he radiogoniometer is a recent in- vention capable of enormous poasi- bilities, It was only shortly prior to the recent mobilization of the | British fleet that it wae fitted to development of the radiogon!- [Ometer is based upon observations made M oni on hie famous merican liner attempted to recel sagen clear acroaa the Atlantic from a huge sta- tion he had erected at Poidhu in | England. | la well known, this trip resulted messager being received nee of 1,600 miles, while in complet jupt the | heard over a distance of 1,900 miles, | ‘These phenominal distance date tn the developm |the new art were by most important result of ¢ | Two other factora of enormo ing on the future of wirele | raphy were discovered, | "One of these factors im fairly well Oupyright, 1914, by Tee Hrem Publishing Co, signals were actually |" For Finding the’ Whereabouts af a Hostile Ship. R. Binns (Wireless-Operator Hero of the “Republic” Disaster.) (The New York Brening World), The other factor in not ao well known outside wireless circles, it is tranamit direction It was upon thie the radiogoniometer was than In any other. factor Hleveloped, Between a ship's mast: sulated middie of which directly over the wireless cabin is hung four separately insulated wires in the ahape of pyramid which a individually at- tached to one of the four terminals of the radiogoniometer in the cabin. The latter is @ box-like effair with the adjustable parts on the outaide. Tne cirouita of ch side. In the middie of these ie a hard rubber cylinder around which is wound an indepen: circuit of bare copper wire. This cylinder is attached to a handle on the outside of the box, which moves around a com; ial, ‘The usual tuning and recetvi ap- Paratus is used in conjunction with the radtogoniometer, An soon an signals are beard the operator after tuning up to the wave jJength immediately begins to turn the handle connected with the com! dial until the signals maximum strength. Thi pointer attached to the hi of that point of the compa: the sign single in- lly happens is that the op- meana of turning the hap. h of the fou erator te Vi one tion is the one which gives t direction, The so, when he|¢ After ascertaining the direction of | the sending abi termine the di from the for * attachment that -| lentiy and 2] position without its commander hav- jing to disclose his own whereabout: Ite use during ihe. present war will known to the |i » It is that dur- nr | the ta. | other @n increase in her pension. The still use their room, however,” Blodger continued, “and ‘Melia (her name was Amelia Fodder be; she married thé gallant aid veteran, Sam Smunk), bas decided to become an Invalid.” “Decided to become an invalid?” repeated Mrs. Jarr. “Why, yes, being an invalid is so refined, and it also looks good in the application for an increase in pen- sion,” Mrs, Blodger explained. @ took to wearing carpet slip- 4 pussyfooting around,” said Mr. Blodger. “Bho walks in her sleep, too!" mur- mured Mrs. Blodger in hushed tones. “Always toward the ice box,” sniffed Miss Irene Cackleberry. “I don't believe in putting fond back into ice boxes, it only spoils,” remarked Mr. Blodger. “Well, we've got to be nice to her, now that sh &@ soldier's widow,” aid Ure. Blodger. “I wish you were one, Mawr,” re- marked Mine Gladys Cackleberry acidly. “Here, you now!" cried Mr. Blodger in a grieved tone. “Yuh know I'm neutral. Duggun it! I never seen auch bloodthirsty girls! If I wasina war they'd wish an atrocity on me or duty on @ submarine, or something with @ percentage against me like rie rs. + | that: “Hush!” cautioned Mre. Blodger. “Here'’a Amelia now. Don't talk of | wars and such things. Her grief too recent!” . A » Pasty blond woman with pe of a meal sack shuffled in | upon them, sniff “Oh, Mra. Blod she whimp . “they've sent me my husband's ef. fecks from the Old Soldiers’ Home and a picture of him taken at the Get- ytsburg Reunion, but there are four gallant old veterans in the aroup and I can’t tell which is my jhusbin, I can't be expected to cry over five old soldiers for only 824 4 month.” “Don't you care, dearte,” Rlodger sympathetically. “If you break down crying over a group, you'll he wholly dependent and in- have to spend said Mrs. | Governmei printer, is coming over ‘from Washington to see me," moaned re, Smunk (nee Fodder). Suppose |ne ask me if he looked natural.” | “You can't expect $34 a month i shclbs vevth 9 elt Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1014, by The Prew Publishing Oo, (The New York Bvesing World), HE only cure for love or for a “morning-after” headache is but it’s sure one. dimple for love of the whole girl. calling distance of one another. A “gentleman” eooner break all of he doesn’t want her. who is trying to fool herself. - Love Killing It 1s hard for a man to forgive a woman for not being “there” he wants her, but much harder for him to forgive her for being there w } iene 4 Most of the heartaches in this world could be avoided if.a girl w not alyays so ready to mistake a man’s love of adventure for lor herself; and if a man were not always so ready to mistake his “A tool there was and he made his prayer’—to two womens & man who may break a woman's heart, but je ten commandments than shatter her vanity. When a man says that he has “lived” he usually means that bé finished living—as far as his heart, his illusions, and his sensations A woman yearns to be loved “for quite lucky to be loved in spite of himself. reelt,” but a man feels that he ® Wh A young girl sighs for » lover who will be perfectly devoted to ber?) widow {fs satisfied with any kind who won't be devoted to somebody ann There comes a point beyond which a man can't fool even a woj By Sophie Irene Loeb. Copyright, 1914, by The Prew Publishing'Go, (The New York Evening World), “Yet each man kille the thing he loves, By each let this be hear. do & with a Dditter look, Some with a flattering word; The coward does it with a kiss, The brave man with a sword!” IHESE famous words by « famqus dp poet were strongly exemplified by a woman who wept in court the other day and told how slowly but y her husband had killed the love she had for him. There was no other men in the case and the husband did tt want to part from the woman, he awakened to the truth that, gittier of showy friends come flirtatious, the pearl of great price was really at his own hearth- e. “ou he had killed the thing he loved, which was the love of this woman. He had lost he: There are hundreds of ways in whic! man kills the thing he loyes. bog wee By quarrelling before her ¢ By praising other women's o at her oxpenee. ‘ By making her feel that ebeiie merely a domestic drudge. By neglecting to write to her he is away. By flattering her to smooth evati@ grievance. b y 6 her only to By borrowing money ‘hana anteh not paying her bac! By treating her as a feather-| king her feel that he forgetting her birthday en,the’ | fag saniversary: 4 ” at Ing off steam’ me things go wrong at the office. . calling her By being irritated with the off ra that pleased him when éhe By trying to regulate ¢ had f her life. baa * By witeclel he little Some of them are: By the bossy manner after mar- riage that was the glossy manner before. By the promise easily made, but never kept. By playing the devil at home and the angel outside. By rushing out of the house and forgetting the goodby kiss. By fo to admire the dress that she has put on for bis special benefit. By sneering at her singing or de- preciating her other talents. penny that . By regard ir only as the er of his children and failing t she is his chum. By being suspicious of ber she talks to another men tte rule does not go in, the wor tryig: th ture hep y try! urn mother-in-law, which ie AND, ABOVE ALL, BY ING IT’ I8 NO LONGER THE MARRIAGE THAT AFTER SHOWED BEFORE. By Dale Drummond Oopycight 1914, by The Prem Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening World), CHAPTER CIll. TRIED to be brave while waiting for a position, help- ing Nell all I possibly could in return for her kindness to me; turning my facility with the needle again to account in fixing up her wardrobe, so saving her the expense of hiring. But the Nights were the worst. I dreaded the long hours of darkness when the thoughts of Jack came to me, and my| toward t mind formed terrifying pictures of what he wight be doing or in to do, Upon his return from Boston, Mr. Flam called me up and asked me to come over to the offi He took me intv bis private room and told me ail about the funeral, ve me m from Annette and her husband and from Mr. Amesbury, but not a.word from Janet. “Janet feels that in some way you might have saved Jack,” he sai reading my thought, “but she will see in time that if you, like all of us, have made mistakes you are doing your best to tify them and doing it bravely, S patienon dear, and He then gave me the brooch mother had spoken of in her letter, & very beautiful and valuable piece of jew- “You are right. If you desire J will put it in my safe until euch time as you can wear it with a clear conscience.” He again wrapped it carefully, ang, | putting my and address on it,! then sealing it, put it in his safe, Then turning to me he said in the kindest way, with ote of something like pity in ‘olce: onition for Tt to have to the fact that you an unskilled workman with absolutely no experi- ished. I flushed. I couldn't beip it, It was to be part of my punishment uld work in @ place where carried “The pay is email.” he expect for twenty as soon as te only fair to tell you Tour appeares+e that deci the tion. ur style ave been a help in ing you placed, but I must aiso a that they may be the ineans ng ba trouble also,” "t think sol” I inter. without some drawbacks,” eald Mra, |™™ sm Soryye tote Oe ) hel black,” looking at the stylish costume I had on, one of most exclusive models,. “But thing simpler than paul nega smiling. I thanked him gratefully. Not was I glad of the chance to money, but now my mind occupied, I weuld no longer time or strength to sit fi for hours. Not the least change in of view, the angle I was ote life, wae the change in : ‘h's man. The man? viled, hated, sneered at, I now, heya to please. to win if ie . T now hi ed back me plea P' should soon be able to pay thé for which I atone was responsible, for which Jack was All the rest of the late into the I ee 6 Mee dreas ovoupy. that Se woman I bearded hour, Neil refused. “1 to it,” I told nevertheless. some spol be the Ly

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