The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1914, Page 8

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os The Evecing World Daily Mag - "3 azine. Srtarday. Wovekbi? 21: 1914 What Every SRT — Tess Woman Thinks é EBTABLISHMD BY JOSEPH PULITZER. [Daily Mecept Sundar by the Prose Publishing Company, > ETHING IS My Stoceiner x By Helen Rowland New York an fecond-Clans M e Fees Loose jatter. For England and the Continent and All Countries in the International Postal Union 4. Copyright, 1914, by The Prew Publishing Go, (The New York Evening World), AS TO THE “WOOD FIRE” OF SENTIMENT. HY is it,” remarked the Bachelor, as he knelt before the neatly ar- ranged heap of twigs and autumn leaves and touched them with a carefully shielded match, “that a woman never can learn to build a firey” ' “@he never has to,” returned the Widow serenely, watching | him atruggie anxiously with the tiny blaze and surreptitiously powdering her small nose the while, “Sho can always find some MAN willing to do that for |her. There ts nothing on earth that any man enjoys so much as starting © | flame—whether it's a bohfire or a flirtation, From the time when he is big enough to reach the box of matches off the shelf hie soul is filled with the love of arson and the mad desire to play with fire.” | “There!” exclaimed the Bachelor, triumphantly, “T've got it going @& last. Now, if you'll watch it while I run back to the car for the hamper”—— é “Of course!” mocked the Widow, with a significant smile. “That's MY juty!” DY FOR THE CONQUEST. it of Andrew Jackeon appears on the face of the new | Reserve Bank certificates. What would Andrew) thought of this? If there was one notion “Old Hick- | it was that public money should go into the hands of «| bank or any branch thereof. Rew eystem we have brought into existence provides the! if not the fact, of a central bank. Instead of ownership of | dh cagoreenend of banks in a central organization. 7 beg your pardon?” The Bachelor glanced up questioningly as he rose ing principle hes established itself in the nation at! T SEE 0 1 sie @anieioa Tate the right moment to help finance and business to their feet Ses MS gulag 054 vancly Ol the Mate "ie aan) 1h wists fas cal « ket is it is true, must now bear the strain of expansion—| gg she r terested. He will spend hours coaxing up the flame in a fpolish little bon- sa { on the depleted returns of hard times and lean sum- fire and the moment it is blazing properly and beginning td be worth white he will lose interest in it and stroll away and leave somebody else to keep {t going. And he will spend days or weeks or months in stirring up the flame in a girl's heart”"—— On rrrrrwrrrmrrrrrmerrrrrrreerrmrmrrnnnmmmmnrwn Bt is the consciousness of big national oppoggunity business can ing. The war in Europe is offering that opportunity on an | H Easier to Put Out Than Kindle. ; . ‘ : RRR RR Att PPP APRA PLLA © scale. Never have good times found a better basis of solid 66 ND then walk off at the psychological moment and leave it for some t “Gnd extraordinary trade prospect upon which to march in other man to éxtinguish,” rejoined the Bachelor, hastily, the t “Or to die for want of fuel,” corrected the Widow, flinging « i country. fresh armful of twigs on the bonfire. “But run along!” ehe co! > petulantly, “and get your hamper. Men are 8O material! 4 “And I fancied I was immaterial!” answered the Bachelor, meekly, with- | out etirring. “Anyway,” he sighed, “all the fun and excitement of a fre— bon, grate or sentimental—is in starting it. There is really nothing quite eo depressing as—ashes! Even a good srate fire has to be shaken up every now and tl in order to keep it blazing. But a woman always Insists on | raking over the ashes of a dead fire when she might be"-—— “Bullding a new one!” broke in the Widow, satirically. “Oh, yes; of cou it's always the fault of the woman! When a man marries he fancies that after the honeymoon HIS duty toward the domestic flame is finished and that because he has proved that he loves a woman by marrying her he | need never mention the fact again. But if the fire goes out, and the domes- tie hearth becomes cold and chilly, his excuse is always that the woman * BETTER STILL: ABOLISH IT. - [HI the State’s chief prison reformer as Warden, we may _ look for a cessation of the scandals and abuses by which E. Sing Sing is forever shaming the State. Osborne is an authority on prison systems. His zeal for knowledge led him to live for a week at Auburn, His in- is A sa sik ‘ i} eglected to kt itn; fuel.” si prison reform is not born of political ambition. At Sing ce NS. SHE CAN'T | newtNemlected to—-What?” i i i “To keep her hair curled, Mr. ; the Widow, “or to jean work out his theories and learn from both successes and HEAR US flatter hinn, br to feed him-his favorite dishes; that she gave him cold -offes SHE IS DEAF or cold kisses; that she lost he or her complexion or her style or her novelty—in short, that she did: id him’! But it never occurs to bim Sing will never quite stop troubling the people of LAMP Post that he neglected to come home eventins and to shave twice a day ‘ ae : y y candy nr woodby In t rings, al Wate until it ceases to exist. The whole place in archaic, over- |e ee rR jecceeary fuel to kee the wood fre of sentiment bright and mM, grimy with accumulated rust and dirt, hampered by unsani- Godin ah itiens and makeshitt methods. ‘The beat servi ; F t service Warden i Thousand Dollar Bills for Fuel. tan perform is to show New Yotk how to clear it off the replace it with something clean and up to date. ‘ te ONLY THEIR DUE. VE re-elected Howard Elliott President of the New Haven,’ in of its Executive Committee and President of ite rd of Directors is only, to give stockholders of that shaken that the new era is to continue as it has begun. New Haven is speedily and thoroughly to rehabilitate it- be upon a basis of revived responsibility to its atock- Hy I RRA AAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRAAAAAPAPRODRRALAS: 166 H, 1 don’t know!” retorted the Bachelor, nonchalantly. “There ere ‘different kinds of fuel for different kinds of fires, and I've seen many a wife's love exist very nicely on a limousine, a box at the } opera, a diamond tiara and a yearly trip to Europe, In fact, it requires a mighty substantial sort of fuel to keep the flame in the average feminine heart bright and glowing, and it will blaze much longer on good hard money than on little twigs of attention and romance and flattery. [t's a man’s piace to go out and get the big logs and a woman's place to stay at home and etir the flames and supply the Kindlings, and if each attends to his or her share the fire can be kept going forev—for quite a while.” ” agreed the Widow, gazing dreamily into the fire, “If he supplies the rent and the roast beef I suppose she should supply the souffle and the kisses; but even in marriages like that the fire goes out sometimes.” “Well!” sighed the Bacnelor, philosophically, “it's a wise cook 1d a wixe lover who know when the fire is out.” “and,” finished the Widow, “who realizes the folly of atirring up the ‘hl PRP Rr lle el hakahakalalahal af al akalll Mr. Jarr Learns Strange Secrets | and Witnesses a Painless Panic Elliott has shown keen sense of that responsibility. 4 e that property of New Haven stockholders was wantonly Tk J EF il ‘money which belonged to them shamefully diverted from le arr am y tse. He has made a move toward locating some of the} B ‘ whic on ot 4 robe ordes 7 APASABAASAIAABBIAABABSABBABDAAABAAAS , did NOT “vanish into thin air.” He should be eacour- | y Roy L McCardell ual, not because It {s goodehoe black: | succinct, then, our worthy friend Gus’ Ciperie. 1914. by she. rom Fantini Oo, Che Son Se = at it, If there be such a thing as justice New Haven | ‘Gavright, 1016, by The Prem Vubliadeg Oo, (The Now York Evening World), Ing, but because it can be used to| would not have given me his overcoat CHARTER Ox; ‘Mine morning 1 recetved an unlocked Chapters from a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond are entitled to restitution. 66 HAT did you want anjmen?’” asked Mr. Jarr, forgetting clean the teet’.” because I had none, but when I said) FOUND the work In Mr. lo. letter from mother. ebro” e+e overcoat for?’ asked Mr. mubject ma all this got to do with|! needed It to get rid of your unwel- | Fiam's office most conge-| “Jack has been here,” she wrote Jarr, as be and Mr.| “Because street hawkers must ‘pitch rooat ?"* 4 Mr. Jarr. come crowd of visitors he lent it) nial. 1 was in his private on « sow on his way tr How OPEN THE SHUTTERS Dinkston, the post, pbil-|their pipes'—raise their voices,” ex-| “I was approaching the crux of my | ¢#serly.” office in a corner by a inrge| Fork. I told him you were working . osopher and efficiency engineer, Came|piained Mr. Dinkston. “Hence, as the application of this! “Hut what do you want it for?’ window. He had bought 4! address at Mrs. Burns's. He says he will see you first, then give Bimaecif up if any one ts disposed to prose- ved him. I want to prepare you, ju the astute Mr. Gasoline Bill Barker tance of practical peychol- !"asked Mr. Jarr. “And if you do want | !arke screen for me, and when peo- proved to me, you can sell shoe|ogy by those preliminary explana-|it, why do you wear it in that ple came into his office I wes per- blacking to the crowd or the Individ-| tions,” replled Mr. Dinkston. ‘To be| fashion, buttoned around the neck|fectly hidden, unlens, of course, he n, for the change you will eee in : —-—---——— | with one button, but without your | needed me. a Ilo has grown older, ie quite 7 i Ww < Ww ; arms in the sleeves?” 1 went Norah two dollars a week |iray and more sedate. But he ba» e@ eek Ss as “Again the psychology of the un-| #94 mother fi jollars; that added tw | conquered himself and I trust him By Martin Green are too secretive, according to tho President of the | °Ut of Gus's, Mr. Dinkston wearing, Brewers’ Association. He would turn the present Uae Fastin Bho ey mee! able huttered saloon into an open room where men could] garment of woolly blue. families to enjoy “malt liquor and other harmless bever-| “Pld you notice, my dear friend.” . Deinks more i replied Mr. Dinkston, “that Gustavus, J aia series than beer he would rule out. our estimable bontface, lent me this george hint for saloon-keepers who lament that moving-picture | garmont without besitationt It iss G@¥e cutting down the number of saloons in New York, ‘The |Surlous trait of human nature that if . }fully. You must do the same. He usual,” said Mr. Dinkston. ‘Does one| ™Y te” dollars made seventeen dol: Lei be huis Meee coteennes ate ever get used to seeing people wear lars a week It cost me to live. The [letter and will come direct to you. an overcoat in this unbecoming man- other sixteen of my thirty-five I r-;God bless you beth, Mother.” ligiously put away each week, and 89/ §&o Jack was coming to me af last! you will ask for something that has Capovight, 1014, by The Prem Publidhing Co, (The New York Broning Wortd), ner? But it rivets the attention. I bad $40 or $60 I paid some : goes out of an evening to relax and be amused. If he|, definite use, atating your purpose ‘ "AYBE Colurabia Univer-){0 carry them into a life of tragic| Were 1 to go to your house and say | bill. Loraine, eet Med in carne (At nent a i family along it gives him a senso of pride and virtue. If|to use it in some manner wholly 6 Gity’s indifferent show- onneeyes. Ri aE Gee | tam Ul’ as I am going to, and 1 est ahoet Fe fd fn g. Cy RS my heart and I could scarcely think saloon he must go alone or with other men. foreign to its common purpose, it will ing in athletics in| tnrough as college course would be my overcoat, or, rather, Gus's| wae able, Ne wie te. of | onncctedly. But mother had eaid he v4 &° What he} foouht yoata ineptred| nies 1k Uimenchnte Dut ther |overcont, in @ normal manner, as 1| tants, Sites ~ note of | would be with me almost as soon as be granted you without a murmur; . success. her letter. President, Nicholae| wouldn't be such conspicuous failures | said it, the effect would not have ite| { read, 1 studied, 1 worked. ‘This|then, that BO le Murray Buller to announce that is thew sently Gas army pales | purpose, But if [ enter wearing the, Was my life at this time. Loccaston-| Rushing downstairs, I called Mr. only “phyatcally ft’ atudenta will be| Atte MAS® where thelr mental oR ovecont as 1 ain wenring it that| ally spent Sunday with either Sell) Miam on the telephone and told him admitted ed the|ead their careers as» breadwinners | alune wiil have its psychological vith ee’ and Mrs. Flam. Of my i weue Rat» be, Samra unless he par- head polisher. would not be tinged with such keen/fect, bearing me out in my ruse,|other friends and acquaintances 1| ‘Are you ill, Susan?” he asked #o- pie uaually more fiery than beer. |where it would have never been given eer! ination between beer and stronger drinks did much tofyou for its legitimate purpose? : the well-conducted halls and pleasure gardens of Kurope,, “Had 1 asked Gus to lend me ms where nothing but beer was sold might make for order, | oversea 9° pega llielraprciglly aise ‘ ily end temperance here in New York. of purchaning one, he would not bave| "The beat equipped studenia are not bitterness.” to its trlumphant consummation. | saw practically nothing. If 1 passes|tlcltously. | ae necessarily those of the Watch!" a “No, but unless you really need } ' . : Dermltied whe garment ta avestion 10 pity vigor,” wuld the laundry man. Expressloce Bxpresses. eH the only recognition. ‘Mildrea Somera |r should like the day of” | 2 Es its From Sh arp Wits. Go into my possesion. “Cereainly it would be a shame to petenneeenesees | By this time they were at Mr. Jarr’s| was in Europe, and I seldom sew! “Certainly, my dear. I wae afraia ew pk tiv bth i maaan oy en Another variant of this obtuse at-/bar cripples of sickly youths from| 47 WAS coming ¢wa on aaubway| 40°F ‘They entered, with Mr. Dink- | Ned. | When | aid De siwa bowed | you were ill.” \ - ¥ & combination of physical) titude in the genus homo ts that af/the boon @ college education. A ni ston tottert: nd ‘i * . Flam made everything so mer apa 4 tf . u nd bo Be express this morning’— be-) ing and moaning, his head | { had been in Mr. Flam’as office about | ¢, easy tohing & man}and mental tndoleuce.—Albany Jour-| yoy will ofter any article or utensil |COlsES Of huskies wouldnt exhibit aah ced saad aaliaer, \Gunehed Gown in the neck of the|s month when I again heard. trom |Co pretend nscs eee eer reane eee eee that Las @ legitimate use or purpose, aman), When a woman promptly admits|nct for that legitimate use or pur- ‘us to eee : 3-H eek, helmeted with Oe, Jot suaweet, mark it down | pose, but for a use or purpose wholly flaps and booted rT That.-Omaha Bes | . Jexeuliy about how oe bo dias bic ' | foreign, the sales will be phenomenal. ‘onap."—Philadeiphia | A mother will alwa: college in which physical fitness was} “Whaddaya mean subway expresn?” overcoat, its empty sleeves gangling | Jack. And again it wae nothing but/to him. He trusted me and T bea " a blank postal card. But this time, not a test of adminsion. asked the laundry man. “Oh, you somety, Oth the help of Mrs. Burns’a magni- feleds hi, #o hard, to be worthy of . , “Those who claim that onl; mean one of those trains with the| « y ms D4 Pept, TE alee eat, only the | catered hendiighte: that fun On tbe) pi West into amattery. cried Mrs. | fying wines, (made oUt the pon roeras | «pt want back inte my pie pelt to West Point and| middie tracks below Ninety-sixth | Bodser, fackleberry girls, Mre.|it was o litte town ip the extreme (though I had just finished dressing, 7 of the highest , Street! And so those are the subway | Bingle, Mr. Jared Smunk, Mrs. Ame- Rortnwes: he iehet H fA. rity Ty immediately undressed, combed my ned with the | presses! Ne Smunk, the sister-in-law and vet. | Might ete lottel. 1 Winie from the | hair in a more becoming a 4 “ince the begianing of the fall rush eran's widow, and Mr. Dogetory, the| Gead letter office, Hither he was not | Plainly, as I wore it to the oaen tne Ee eee ee ct aad ante Mind nt, ia chorus, ’ ster omwoing by wome other (M# Jack used to Ike me to wear it tween One Hundred and Tenth Stréet | Pres# “gent, in there, vas going by some, other |T'then selected the prettiest ai ‘and Broadway and Brooklyn Bridge, “Poor Dinkston ts sick, and I bave| name. ‘The latter, iy. 5 ress telling Mr. Flam,|}ad in my wardrobe, one T had beon extended five minutes. "Al brought him here to take oare of] tated, long ae i teltee Mr, Sout worn aince Thad remodelied tt, and year aga the run was made in 25) nim," said Mr. Jarr, ait, But again, ae before, it had| Putting it on I sat down to walt. minutes. H moaned Mr. Dinkston husk: | put new life, new courage in me just|_ J had an interesting book (at Icant “This year it takes half an hour.! { Jenk was alive, and think- | had thought ao the night bof ‘The distance is elx miles. The rate| ‘ly. “I have specific inflammation of per. I wee uy nard’ studied [and tried to read; but T couldn't kere an hour, | the parotid glands, colloquially known | go" assiduously, that Mr. Flam de-|still. I stood at the window wntoh. jas the mumps! as he|ing, or walked back and forth until I cure her | W:\le, had you offered it for ite owa ee meey Or crying, but the neighbors | particular purpose alone, yeu might eee wo into bankruptcy owing to : our skeleton key t6 the) 4 versatile man ix one who can talk| Not being uble to sell the legitimate os the right time and keep atill when | article or utensil for its legitimate nothing ti at for good nature is of- 6 to say—Toledo | purpose. exampli mental efficiency com! physical young men of the Army colleges proof that they h. ‘The entrance cult, particular! ‘The course of study in a steady grin ‘To go Sarouie weet Point or & lie a youth must have som uw No bonehead can score |of speed is twelve m! ‘don't let the | 80me express speed that DF ember when I was engagod ly im mathe as an itinerant vender of novelties, under the tutelage of a most experi- enced street hawker (or, they are Professionally known, ‘Pitchman’), R clared I ‘must take it easter, *| bonehea: iran aa enrnceaceremmneacael , ‘he mumps!" shrieked the foared 1 would be ill. became ao nervous I feared I shoul | who was wonderfully versed in the} “It might be a good idea for our ~ Safely Hidden! t | we. ‘al ': om | hy it went on. Even though I was, brenk down utterly when he come | payehology of the crowd, Mr. Gano | college authorities to pay more atten- > } ‘And they rushed off the teen | 8t times lonely, Sn6 unhapes, time aay fia made op tee maine that t rem! passed Ww! nc ness. nd calm. OOP PAPAL line BI Barker, 1 tion to the mental qualifications of “rh uf er, firet grasped the the young meh who clamor to be in- “J iE," said the head polisher,|in panic; little Hallo’ Bingle sail-| Once 1 thought 1 would have Norah; My room was bare and unlovely-—a Here is my solution to the “ig of if s Iron” biem: Let I culeated with knowledge and culture ‘that the local Federal Re- | ;; in the air by the hand of und the children come to New York,| typical lodging house room. I had 8 bie "oe trun weighing 366 pounas peak from Mr. Gasoline Bill) and follege spirit. ‘Thousands of hon- ‘a oanave, Bonk Folhannd the sum 66 mother, who led the stampeding uate eee Hast Woe eet een ae | oe at erat eae eae hott = & surface of at least , @arnest young mon | $160,000,( week.’ = D> \. rack me Heri tant cae tian’ Yataina Pict] “Why ate etree! bawkerm eorner| © led every year by our col-|" “Tt may bave been released,” aaid| Ves from the contagious infection | tat if I did I should not be able tojas too ugly to recetve Jnck tn. { this pig with t aurtace ‘upper: | venders o ind univeraities, They are the'the iaundry man, “but it lent at/empbasized by the wrongly worn|save anything toward the debts, | would get some flowers, fo telling moat in tho sea. When left to iteelt | Qube with just eumielent brains large, overtnat re Tene aire ee A er Tibet it would sink, Its impetus to the a n | bottom when it has sunk one foot | * A pees me to take two weeka and visit them |in a few minutes, I hurried aroun: ight, 1914, be The Pres Hwttiching Oo, ain, but 3 refused, I could not allow : the corner to a little florist uhop. enid then be proportionate tonite) Lhe One Window of His Soul w (ct yim wa”) we B je Irene Loeb? ngein but t retuned sould not allow este 8 iti forge Chop sf. cuble fest of ¥ bey “s se 7 1 Srne te one al «4 of how A was kind to beaming many Fa tvny sorrows would be) un -2 pounds iow soul,” ry je pace thatia t ad averted!” After all, “there is eo much % sande Far) rd pounds! \ eee we Ne aN fie had been battered about from 00d in the wore of us, than tp SET RES 8 she varentel palatial ci une ilina ia een tiee / per ree nd efiaitun. cluding words of an old) ambition, love or anything, clos Iett| sxe riers sensson to hie bettar belt, best of us!” The trouble| wno cannot.see the good vointa in the | the ways and : for pounds. woman into whose home| with which to fight. It was the ene window that remained ‘TE the bad fab fare cre on or ‘own way in tit. bee ‘o hold _up such a weight the dene- ast week to ascer-| He finally found his \. a terness, and then afterward FRET | gloo: tlity of the column of wate: i th when ‘ner find that way was the pa" PS" fat “sor | Seualty Seon Naelt Is ip hourta Remrnie at arse aia wasn ane, a8 one, a iteelt, LA at fire washil and it, the Ti 4 worked for all of them.” She offered home. thet Enero, the wife whe magaiton her ine might reach the road of reform by tornste

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