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TOM PINE. ORO MERC IRENION WN ronan aw ones meer, uhh re mot ro Sg aR IE cane = ns aaah PE nd ae > OF 4k Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland ~ Cupevight, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Oo, (The Now York Bvening World). 'HEN a man breaks an engagement with you, dearie, it is always | for a perfectly good reason—be she blonde or brunette, : «NO. 19,441 CONFIDENCE THE CONVALESCENT. AVINGS BANES in Manhattan, the Bronx and Westchester have eased up on the rule requiring eixty days’ notice for the with- drawal of depositors’ money. Improved business conditions Dt — aoarince Group 5 of the State Savings Banks Association that the | @txty-day rule is no longer necessary and that individual banks can be | - rusted to use their own discretion in revoking it. Bes Bvery day now more observers eight good times. Over in Phila- | @dphis, where it takes « long time to see anything, 150 credit men Ga “prosperity such as hee never been experioniced by any people ag @ny country at any time.” % With important Buropean nations at war elfminated @om the 's markets and the world looking to us, until each land shall have adjusted itesif to a new condition of effaire, the United States is facing an opportunity unparalleled ‘fm history. 4 Even the Stock Exchange lifted ita head yesterday long enongh Qe comment on the improved financial situation and send word to the Seekers that they may buy and sel] unlisted atocks if they choose, Alimony: The amount that man has to promise to pay a women be fore she will promise not to co F home. \ : Every time a girl falis in love again. 6 begins to “believe in falries” all over it It USED to be “a long, long way to Tipperary;” but nowadays o maa merely has to pick up the telephone receiver in order to reach “the ewé@t> est girl” he knows—and naturally that takes away all the spice and” =, thustasm. a Pshaw! It fs no more reasonable to expect a man to love you tn Tow because he loves you to-day than it is to assume that the sun will shining to-morrow because the weather is pleasant to-day. oy ntimental note just after he has spent the same thrilling effect as offering him o immediately after dinner. ¥ 2 A “good woman,” according to Mrs. Grundy, is one who would séovd to sacrifice society tor the sake of a man but will cheerfully sacrifiee @e man she marries for the sake of society. If a woman tsn’t jealous of a man she can't possible love him, and tf «h@ ai Conviction is strengthening. Returning cheerfulness rapidly WAT Your 1s he can't possibly love her. So what ts one going to do about it? ae ~~ "| You u NEVER Marriage: The alchemist that puts the “ties” in amenities. ‘The commission appointed to prepare the way for the Con- | Ate ll CA Ac Rook Sy stitational Convention in this State ts getting together « work- His LooKs 4 fag brary which will include the Constitutions of all the States % ~ duly indexed and annotated. This ought to be fine for a @elegates. But who ie going to prepare something to make Constitution iateresting and exciting to the average clector? ————_ 4 ———__—_—_. OUR NEGLECTED STREETS. JOR the hundredth time New York is told that its strect-cleaning methods are antiquated, that open ash and garbage cans are X barbarisms and that the pavements never get enough washing. . This time the Academy of Medicine is the critic and calls upon he Board of Estimate to “provide proper facilities and sufficient | equipment, including horse-drawn or motor sweepers and equeegees uch as ere in use in London, Berlin and Paris.” When Love Is Dead. By Sophie Irene Loeb. Copyright, 1914, by The Prew Publishing Oo, (The New York Kvening World). Q HUBBAND writes to me as, with the mothers of the that there are many ways, follows: knowingly or no which “L have read your article| surely kiiicine love of thelt hus! on ‘Love-Killing.” I agree LP al el with your arraignment of Bemis 6 em are: ing suspici of his time men in the part they play to kill the| spent away trom her. = i love of their wives; but is there Ke ‘ein poset d to recognize that men something to be said about the ae men frien i ¥ appearing before him in ‘the woman's side of the case? everlasting kimorfo or wrapper, “Do they not do their By dressing for others in pi as men toward killing to her husband, ; gate .|. By showing an envious attit @ rule, are willing to take their medi |, neighbors’ better circumstances, * r cine, where blame is concerned, but By spending easily the money for ‘ Let’s remember one thing. In London, Berlin and Paris, munici- are women as ready to do the same?| which he has to work hard. ) pal authority goes straight ahead and shows citizens how these things Tale an aye'® inane teelet children that he has been crowded out, le Husband, uite ) ghould be done. The public becomes accustomed to the beet methods Paeh eiusslin soeielulug ite bersld| (eG here neyS ue Wreataaan | where women are concerned. Indeed,! By insisting on the home bein, ‘and expects them. | 1 am sorry to say, there is much to bel orderly that he is afratd of using it. | Here everindy is fr wmobody she thin.” ‘The Stet QS] Se! There tre many, many women| Ay deplurins Jealousy without Rag Cleaning Department leans on the Health and deren Boards and |Sreo lone the love they want most, In| real foundation, _ hopes for help from the police, What ia everybody’s Teatssas is no- ak | dust os many ways as do our “lorda| ‘ By insisting on selecting his neck- 5 of. creation.” en, In their case they, too, do not realize By burdening him with househeld it until it is too late, Most often they | ca: The Academy of Medicine investigators complain that “the public go on the theory that possession means By telling him of all the petty aa. ~ 4s indifferent.” Why shouldn’t it be? Since Col. Waring’s time no- rene never’ and forget a jow- noyances of the children when | dody in authority hes ever shown New Yorkers what can be done to SLIAAAABISAABASAASISIALAIIAAAI BAIR S men “until the courte decide” which) | By r making @. practice of delicatessen ici treet. ° M J Finds That “Publi ity oF yet in all fairness to Mother Eve'al "Ry continuing to talk about an off venfmat te Deparment of Set Crease woe ty ets el’ = Lhe Jarr Family ean eg 3 so oo Soerd Ske aI echig ant brown’ sa | gut number in an ° @ man with no time to talk difficultice, a man who will open the Makes Strange jail Fellows ” |r it siistce sua get ub with te taa| tort eryinn to “maRagg” | Iydranta, flush the streets, get the beat machinery and keep it at work. By Roy L. McCardell Aasnssesssssasasesasraaassasassaes heyy derstin eats of ite Gig oF et) Bi eine to he a “xvod fellow Once start « real system of street-cleaning and the public will be ay good for @ thousand s “Oh, tut, tut!" spoke up Mr. Ber- t peasy being indifferent to his business} when parece i him trom «pet ‘ to recognize and appreciate it. When the work begins to be Satan Oe Fas Pine Penn ON "Cbs or Pele rvatan Wont, Weak as The Inverted Mind Reader!’| nara Blodger; who had been fretting | {crest Oo ee anows that by| nfo” . 4 tn, by. “How about the and well done, funds will be found to continue it. aging m4 ia as Tien |ste beste Weotlgrep el acnesrred head in an Eayptian setting, andlest ets ey Zoom searifions as cntye Leen By Secisine tei ses wie jowseatetaat, SOE Sarre ocean momen but she looked around for «| husband's brother, the retired Govern- Chinese punk burning in bra-| “I'll be glad if you will all dine with | can. And, above all, by forwetting that. aid Mr. Dogstory. “While it ia true I haven't an expense account when I'm press agent for a fillum— ‘That 1s perhaps one reason why| little love now and then is relishedeiy knot bole in the Atlantio| ment printer and printigg office mon- solr tae, Say bsrpnenners) ane man should strive to use forbearance! the worst of husba City boardwalk to elip|¢y lender, Jared Smunk, the man who the orchestra softly playing ‘Narcts- through when the cheery voice of had to atand on bis head to see things |*Us’ to give the act clas Harold Dogstory, the Prince of Press! aright where he couldn't turn them|Could work with a dozen ‘pI our attraction is ‘The Horrible Hap- Agents, hailed her. As she for | Gongs down! the audience and an easy cod Penings to Hattie, in Five Smashing | afterwards, “The great error in being| Also, there she was, through her have I now? 4 silver wate! Spectacular Reels—All Punch and eoctally intimate with persona who|*cial aMilations witn Mra. Blodger, in{#llver watch!’ ‘And what is this| Passion!’ I can still stand the ex- are in the alightest degree deciasese| the company of Mrs. Dora Bingle, article? =A lady's handkerchief! | pense of a little dinner in moderation, fe that they bring you into contact|™0#t hopelessly and meal-sackey ‘Thank you, a lady's handkefchief!’ Come, there is @ tango beanery just With @ whole eucceasion of persona! “™ddle class,” and her fat little boy) | “Why, I tell you we could clean up; | up the Boardwalk! CHAPTER OVI. “How are you getting along?” she each more imposetble than the| ith his red bow legs. pnd! t woulda's been: the Boarawalk) Well all @o ¥p th. my. onr|'! pale! ae birthday. 1 could) eked kindly, if patronizingly, "T dart ether!” But to the discer: ig eye of the| trying to get publicity for a five-reel| Mr. Blodger, as -bé pointed proudly T was my birthday. free |#UPpose you have heard from z Why in the name of reason should married teachers be permitted prince of press agents, as he after-|fllum but eitting in a mahogany|to the Klassy Kar standing down in scarcely swallow my coffee | Coolidge?” this rather suspiciously; T @evemain in the service if jt is the avowed policy of the Board of eee pata lg eet om ward explained, “it, waa all. good| suite overlooking Broadway with the| the adjacent avenue. and made no pretense of| thought. a mi Saucation to discourage their having children? On the face of it the | with by Harold Dogstory, who Hnkea| "UD! city.” money coming. is go. foe it would) "Te this your ort” aeked a shiokest eating, sithoush I knew I), UNO, 1 have heard nothing! i ry, who Hni her. M: stcard was my on. “L tell you what!” Mr, Dogetory| almost push Me out of the window|man, coming from under the Board- Reena) my. breakfast. fact that I had received it, mime, ‘The Coroner whe declared his belief that the people have a th Fight to know how public officers are conducting their offices ts } (__ totally unfit to be « Coroner. * a TEACHER-MOTHERS. HE Mayor has dropped « word of common sense into the teacher-mother controversy which seems to have addled so many brains. Chapters from a Woman’s Life - By Dale Drummond ~ Copyright, 1014, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New Yark Evening World), Miting is inconsistent, inhuman, bad ethics, absurd. Either let us have | her with the great metropolis, “and| aadea, “if I could into Long Acre Squar walk, Mr, Blod, As I went down the steps the post- 7 ki J ; get eight little e a ir. Blodger nodded, I wish he had taken some on@) all that ever went wi! “Tl Tes man cai with leasant @e married teachers or let us admit the right of married teachers to Loe tO rith evening) powlerged boys like little Holloway continued Mr. Dogstory, | New Vouk’! said thet Seealing it in peo] eee hess area baie on Fr aren If Pave robbed. 206 aan Gress,” as Kipling saya. Bingle, and put on a Human Croquet For there she was; in the company|Game with them acting as wickets of the Blodgere and the Cackleberry|—why, I could book it solid for three Girls, who were in company with Mra.| years in the Big Time! While, as for @amuel Smunk, the soldier's widow; that old Amos, who is a human head- his forehead with a pad of for mail by handing me four letters. G Selbed Sack moss » ee Rather, three letters and a post card, otherwine made, "It waa I rushed back to my room, thankful I had dressed so quickly. I should have time to read them. My heart beat + fast, I was 20 ex- be mothers and grant them necessary leave of absence—if need be, | Gp the Moyor suggests, without pay. Burely the question is not so complicated that the Board of Edu- ation must make itself ridiculous by these clumsy efforts to maintain ~» Speuthority and conceal its bad logic. “Oh, you do the Highbrow and I'll do the Lowbrow, And I'll have a bankroll before you!” I could say? “Where are you living now? om PEERED AsenNeEnE ; W sna‘ did not understand. the we "Tam living on East Tateig- 4 an not understand the reaso: “No. I am living on il Songs of the Warring Nations Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy at soon anf reached. my room Til fourth street Wee dreary that admits no defeats. By F don't know what made me—looked at} ‘Quite a difference. What By Eleanor Clapp. y Famous Authors i the postcard first. It was from Jeek.| ber? Til drop in and chat ‘The drst inkling T bad had w ¢ bY Copyright, 1014, by The Prem Publishlag Oo, (The New York Kvening World). @ alive or since he left m Hits From Sharp Wits Ths SURAIGN "taunting. EPIGRAMS. By La Rochefoucautd. Be ysadse Twas sasiea. uk after| van working ‘Whee ecce wi alty finde tt e When vices leave us we flatter our-|an intrigue, the excitement of mind me intense dit you care to come then I shall be Gattery vanity, sineare | Oy Sade tt with tonap an8 chews HE Turks are not a musicall From a musical polat of view there| selves by thinking it is we who leave|Which gallantry causes, the natural not written Fd.} to soe you, if you can olim> ewe ae m.—Macon Telegraph. people, but neverthelens| !# not much to recommend “L’Ham!-| them, inclination to the pleasure of being ere tat con come! Tho seat nesttoron waite to they dal 8 national] Grose tee.cune based en aa siment|'M™ so ¢ loved and the pain’of retauing, pers | moter Maing, He hed sant ade oicge eavention le the abitity t0| tne partuere ca bot get tn stone anthem that is solemnly|orivin “and vcontting “iittie that in| ‘The good we have received of al ty \ova wnen tute’ ware indlenced | [ood "anaiously for the postmark, after years.—Al- performed on all state oc-| melodio But it ts a ft match for] man requires us to be tender of the/only by coquetry, but it was so blurred I could not di i Abdul id was cer- ° cipher it, although I borrowed a ma; whee Hey if first nnew yu ee — ae Reannciaied ant and not the|casions and at theatres and ts played| [) My atthsant tale Soeeeeeeyh be does ui All Mycoses tech oe te ta trom Drs. Burns. CEMA, SO hee is hard to tell whether fe mean remarks |by all the military bands. But, ®l-| that is about the only grain of truth ‘ 7 eu awe whieh!" At least he was alive. That in Atselt climb two flights of Pots with you or at | Sout othere—Milwaukee Sentin though randiloquent verses were|that the made-to-order versen con-| Perfect valor is to do without a|Vice Fenders to yirtue, waa a great comfort y # 1)'yott were making yourselt quite You. Bo don't get fat- cin- written to accompany the air, tt te| tain. Hut his people loved him ao| witness all’that we would do before] jortunate people seldom correct s, able oven It “Mow you ae pees Beceirer, a drone when if comests | fot often sung, as the soldier te little] ol ‘hat Re spent hls daye tn abject! ine whole world. themaelves; they, alwaya think they | Pee fiome one asks; “Can money make | setting around, given to patriotic song. It te more} wont armed with dagger and rf i ing Tight when fortune favors their | night when I int me happy?’ Don't know, but lack often rendered as instrumental than qyen in the seclusion of hia palace. Women often, shine they love even a A time. Now I knew ths , re ih wat Few things at 9 4 jin relgn wi so “beneficent” that] wh they not, he oc * a nowing a {t will make you unhappy.—Mi!lwauk: alti, 2 | one lifelong as vocal munis eae tol Se¥eral yeara ago he was removed 2 it s great folly to wish to be wise ” By the way, what | Beatle gutomobil running off the road. amid or the hymna from the throne by a committee of all alone, geen inj department are you in? I oft ‘When a man seeks trouble he usu- | Deseret News. | Hamid, was composed for the deposed] his own subjects, and hia brother,| The surface may be stirred a little, ee what different feelings I Hopem Strange Sultan Abdul Hamid 11, not long] Mohammed V., who interfered less] but the beart of the country remains It is more often from pride than|nurried down the steps, this time me, you.” his Aaphealen ae tna th in| with the lives and tbertien of his|ever the same.” Like all generaliza-|from deficiency of light that we so|going direct to the store! Jack was| “No, I don't think #0," 1 aster “4 rone I} neople, now relane in hin atead. tions, this may not be strictly true in|obstinately oppose the moat received | alive, and I had friends that loved me n in the cloak department, 16, yt perial bas saigersd The ‘Turks have another patriotic | all particulal ry but it int in music, opinions. awe fina the rie laces |and wished me well. The day turned Ned) } aca, ere writ-)aong, a “War March” it is called,| The militar: ands play a few|taken on the good side and will have to be a most trying one, but Vell, ten b, Ee ul Hey. The words|componed by the samed id Pasha,| marches written by order of the au-jothing to do with the la are ae LR font had only pe. Bhe's a robbe! “Pasha ‘ond "Bey" are military titles: \s refer to t! ultan of Brerilee, but the music of the bulk 1 the bosom of my| srows worse all t } ” The sentiment erything in sight. Greatly | folk one almost always pitche 0 is to do them too hed home about half| The next day was Sunday and Maid bar uWbee fan offers mathemattoal |S tng a0 — emained un- d, When I reac! ed om about hal Fo the Bator of The Brening Word solution of Sten: of the #01 dent loyalty to al- his, both in regard | q minor that bexe remained un. jinuch CT eae pant s'T found some lovely flowere in| tho afternoon I for the first ‘ost approaching worship of the Sul- Jc and poestgy, ts the patriotic ! went up ta nee Gertie. Tet did ‘Will people who have studied phy Irvington, N.Y. | tant TP hymn composed By ‘Maran in Nag-|funevot,"We Won't Go Home Till! Magnanimity despises everything |MY_Foom and @ kind fatherly note) Rout UA Ay Cohn warg | A Musban Wall, preme of the universe; h, a Syrian. Translated, it be-] Morning” is an Arabic air, Manytto guin everythin » appy, she seemed so cont fen, site vieen aatesien ee 20 52 Sse To the Editor of ing World : benefactor of the world! rm ‘Mighty Allah, save to us our! hundred years old). ° shine and different from what she w k ny feBowing: Would a pig n Are there any woree henpecked he great and imperial throne, |Bultan." ‘These words are set to a] ‘Turkey has no patriotic songs, a8} Gravity ts a “physical cloak in. {of sun Oe ee in, that it was delightful | fg 200 pounds or more sink to the} nusbands than | am? After coming "Honor thow givest and glory. plaintive old alr that bas been known/| we understand the word: vongs vole-| vented to hide, mental defecta One Gay as } wae une seved nearly eno to ¢o : : of the ocean? That t's, 1s. home gon, a hard day’a work | am rejoicing around thee, | fo nerations in Syria. The Fausto ing the love for the native land, Her the store I met MI mers. ¥¢/ buiiding, Clitton told. me, pe x * ry I. | ." this song is written back ‘d in tional anthems are simply hymns! True elos pa estiteid was the first tim ad seen her ing over next to Natt ‘and Sat erBeins 1m the depth (aot | Bees ae that Teas over a On raises oe i gurround thee, tm He tame WAY that the Arabic lanc| Ge the Bulan whom the budk of thelall’ that te heeded ana in srine Gate 7, although ey insieted won do ol Love and obey. written, that is, from right] inhabitants regard as t supreme | what is needed, ahe had telephoned m« Naturally,| dinner, ‘Xa: poth took me. O sultan Yicmid long mays't thow fo left, and not as We write, from left} ruler of the world sublime ee ee saowing how Ned Sot, how bitter be| ‘hey were true friends and vend aecth, nell to righ! RO ES ‘aliph; ori 8 as the Ltr Turkish| What is called liberalit ty, te most vet eee ave anes at Ny “ust beginni: to we thee a y-] men MW “God's Shadow should ad wat x « 2 a 4 " 3 \ bi