The evening world. Newspaper, March 13, 1915, Page 10

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“wets, By Maurice Ke'ten + eld etek dani 4 ~ we Ae a! RCN NIE ORE CRRA RS ENRON NPG ESTABLISHED BY JOSEP PULITZER. Except apgay by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to ew York, RALPH PULITZ! President, 62 J. ANGUS RHANW, a by a Pari atoll at the New York as Second-Class Matter, Rates to Set Sedhin For England and the Continent and World for the United States All Countries tn bs calms a and Canada, . Sts: 6 KE AEIEELES SS ELM dnl RES Cd VOLUME 55.....c.ccccseseceeceeeeessssseses NO, 19,568 NO TIME FOR SARCASM. i T* flippancy with which one Public Service Commissioner of « this district received his copy of the grave charges of ineffi- aa ciency, neglect of duty and misconduct in office which the Movernor caused to be ‘served upon four members of the board will ‘do the Commission no good. This public servant is reported to have said: ¥ ‘There is only one thing I don’t like about this document, and that is that March 23 is the date ret for the hearing in answer to these charges. It strikes me that 23 has a “skiddoo” significance, and is therefore unlucky. Otherwise the docu- ment is worth handing down to my children. It in prettier than the one I got when I graduated from the Albany law sohool. From the occupant of an office of peculiar public trust, whe is swell aware that public: opinion and official investigation uphold the » Governor's charges, thie sort of attitude only shows how far he has © forgotten the dignity and responsibility of the position to which he! ‘Was appointed. With s public servant in this state of deterioration there is only one way to deal. The report of the investigating committee was too timid to mention it. The Governor's charges plainly point to it. > ‘The public is impatient to see it promptly and effectively used. ‘No wonder the Prins Kite! Friedrich ts badly run down. Sea raiding te a dissipated existence for any self-respecting ship. : y Pnee det; Ma —— ee HE death of the wife of the richest man in the world reminds us that great wealth does not of iteelf destroy home simplicity nor interfere with the rearing of unspoiled, conscientious children. With « husband of whose millions the whole world speaks, this . Woman led s quiet life, filled with home duties and the care of her | children, singularly withdrawn from public contact or the public eye. - With all the curiosity the figure of the of king has attracted, nobody ‘ever found in his household anything ‘extraordinary or cocentric , enough to be worth a paragreph—perhaps the happiest state an Amer- e ——- Despite all evidence to the contrary; habits of unpretentions ) -Whrift and indostry can and do hold their own against huge odds of | affluence. The biggest private fortune in the world has failed to affect the manners or the morals of the family to which it has come. ‘Nor is there any indication that those likely to inherit it will forget Sree soe oes inte Yaxary ov lease. t + oh ‘The police declare the shooting affair among the turbulent teamsters has nothing to do with the Baff case. Who were the murderers of Beff and who knows with whom or what they ‘have to do? Y ODHOOOOOOO 85 The Jarr Family By Roy-L. McCardell Copyright, 1015, by The Prem Publidhing Co, (The New York Drening World), JERSONS well acquainted with i] Mr. Jarr would have been more than puzsied at his actions the other night. —— THE PUBLIC MUST DO ITS PART. , O, the impossible has come to pass! Health Commissioner || de Goldwater reports that not only is the Third Avenue Railway ; Company running more cars on its Fifty-ninth Street line, but “ aleo that the company’s engineers are at work on a device that will] sunway sooawhat unsteadily, ‘Ke tne ‘warn pereons waiting in the street that a car is filled to 150 per cent.| nour was late it could be supposed ‘ef seating capecity—the limit fixed by the health authorities. that Mr. Jarr had been detained re | This does not look like settled determination to resist the board’s| ti" omce bY s press of work, snd be ‘ordlere—the policy firet threatened by President Whitridge and hie|isstingly at it until it was finished, general manager. no matter how Inte the hour. Over in Brooklyn the B. R. T. has managed to increase the num- Wiegand lager ess ype a fer of trips on its Graham Avenue pk: appar hed bre Paw and of endeavor Mr. Jarr had not only to add seventeen more cars te ite daily at rs. given no heed to the lapee of time c ‘Th of all this cannot be too strongly impressed upon batho tae. sue Sven.) eceenn te the Pullle. 1 mene that long-etending shame of street reilvay evident the offce had been ot and transportati remedied—end F e—wh lose, for Mr, Jarr’s f flushed. orders are ps Merl not suggestions. What has one satengtidied ‘Theos thinge tel on aman, for {twas and lain to be that dist had on these surface lines can be done on others. pling j (apse sebiention A i BUT the public must do its part. By unreasonable impatience of | tail and inattention to fresh air. par rales ¥ con seake tteelf uncomfortable under any conditions, For| ie” (eee and. weakness, and ep hes suffered in tap ve ne! cars. Now let it show] aissiness are twins. Mr. Jarr walked that it recognizes relief when relief is at hand. unsteadily arene Uda circles as he emerged from the subwa: Hits From Sharp Wits. Bul ogame of 4 dan ad Knowhow: ol arduous tasks completed buoyed up teat of know as much ae I| Mr. Jarr. He laughed eoftly to him. | that, ledo Blade. self at his weakness, and when the izziness and weakness combined had be impousitie to present anything i |1e4 his focble circling steps to the original. ove gutter he paused and laughed again. . He was in good spirits, He amiled to Some tmaginations, like usty bull-| himself and ked, “Dontehi dogs, should be chained—Milwaukes | 'mseit and remarked, baad Sentinel, me ™ care!” advice of thi \ to the steps and sat down. The cat dashed down an areaway 0 and through the bars of an iron door|I wanna talk to 'm,” he said softly. _——_—$—$—$_$ $< ——— full half hour Mr. Jarr sat there, and @ policeman came along and roused him. “Better be beating it, old stew, eaid the policeman, and then went on his way trying doors. Mr, Jarr looked after him indignantly. “I refuse, I refuse p-p-pos—i refuse positively to bandy words with you,” be sald. Mr. Jarr then arose and an- nounced that H-A-double R-I-G-A-N Copyright, 1918, ty The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World), jepdiied Harrigén, and that was him. OT long ago a woman sought, It is wise and right, (and mach hap- | “1° !ooked mournfully toward the iron to have some freckles re-|Diness results for all concerned) for|400r and said, as if addressing the moved from her facé, and herself as at-;cat: “Allri', muh frien’, havit cher means that/own way; I kep’ muh date, an’ you as @ consequence found) she may enhance what nature has Cy death, Her! neighbors say | Siven her to its best possibilities, wassent here; sal} rt"! that mhe alwaye had been senaitive| Vided that nature is not ‘Then, still feeling the effects of about the freckles, and, although} When Lig nell cy ner gd to be #0] cVerwork, he walked over to a lamp- Warned many times not to tamper artificially beautiful that nature itself | post and resolved to show that disap- with nature, she could not resist the|!n unrecognised indeed ie she when end came along | beautifully artificial. Furthermore, in| Dointments di not weigh him down, ‘said: “I know a doctor who can Bes nore wg cea “get away | and if a cat wasn't gentleman enough do this without any trouble.” wl er number.’ ito keep his appointment he didn’t T wonder how many friends ere aay ender rani eats | care. To show how little he cared he vanity.” tried to sing. Later he went home. If we women would but realise that/ As he got his nightkey to work and the simplest and it artificial of | ascended the stairs to his ‘apartment women are those truly ARE he tated hasil; long; most attractive, such cases as this, D¢ cost! y_ what position to would not be recorded. I have seen} take in cage he should be accused of are reeey Se. wantonly keeping late hours and bad eompany. “Ub'll be brave. It’s overwork. who bad &| that's what ‘tis; 's overwork, an’ I'll telluns so!” Mrs. Jarr turned. on the light and looked at him, but said nothing. “What's the matter with yuh?” asked Mr. Jarr. “Why dontcher say somepin? Go'n, gimme mub roastin’! Go'n and ‘buse muh. Um misunder- i E If memo: 2 ther! i auiles bs Copyright, 1015, by The Dress Publidhing Co, (The New York Proaing World). OF THE MAN WHO MARRIES FOR MONEY, CK upon a time it was the polite and proper thing not” speak of the man who married for money. He was classed @4 a cad, an adventurer, a fortune-hunter. When a “nico man” 5 & rich girl he immediately “renounced” her, packed his grit went out West somewhere to make a fortune. In novels he ai came back rolling in dollars and fame, but in real life hoe usually met & ‘ girl, somewhere between New York and San Francisco, and settled icing contentedly in the humdrum of middle class existence and love: But, dear me, how things have changed! The name of the-man-1 marries-for-money is legion. And hé does not call himself a fortuhte-ht | but a “sensible fellow.” He cannot “afford” to marry a poor girth) Heavens! How would he manage to keep a wife and his motor-ear He is not exactly looking And of course he must have a motor-car! j girl with @ fortune—but he is not overlooking any bets. He ts not for a rich and gullible old widow; indeed, he would not marry any girt wit at he did not “love.” But he consoles himself with the fallacious old that “it is as easy to fall in love with a rich girl as with a poor one.” | pp Is it? Indeed it te not. It is much easier to IMAGINE that you | love with a rich girl, but much more difficult really to BE in love with Ber. The nimbus of gold dollars which surrounds an heiress so dassies'a young man that he cannot see the girl's real charms with any Tho soft luxury of her surroundings so lulls him into tate of that he never actually awakens to her personal attractions, colored igh f her drawing-room and dinner-table are apt ome to the lights and shadows of her character. The scent of the mosphere in which she moves and lives, deadens his sense of hor 7 o nees. Poor Little Rich Girl! “She ts handicapped, from first to earch for happiness by the taint of the doll: Her touch is Hke of Midas, for, somehow, it seems to turn every mi metallic gold. 1 A NAA AANA RRR RRR RRR OME rich girls sadly recognize this fact and live bitterly to a ripe matdenhood rather than accept the near-love and imitation which seems to be all that ts offered them. They lose their faith ability of the genus homo to love—anybody but himself. Their youthful sions are gone and they are confirmed cynics at twenty. They are helpless in their fight for happiness. Now, nobody on earth would deny the Fich girl her right to love, piness and the pureuit of a husband. And since it is best thet the should be ecattered around equally, it would seem that the poor young OUGHT to be the rich girl's naturel mate, and vice versa. But, alas, poor young man who might make a perfect husband had he walked hand with some poor young girl into a little two-by-four flat, seems ly metamorphosed when he is borne away in the rich young girl's motor ear to her father’s country place for the honeymoon. The man of modest decent principles and honest ideals is suddenly transformed into a self-' gent, luxury-loving, high-flying “rounder.” He is seized with « money-champagne-and-egotism to the head. He goes the pace, ) boat of matrimony and ends by creating a divorce scandal and becoming | life member of the “Their Ex-Husbands Club.” é Why ia it? It ie because the PRICE OF MONEY is too heavy. greater than the price of love, the price of fame, or the price of anytl else in the world. The man who works for riches must sacrifice all and comfort of life in the struggle; the man who inherits riches pays with his ambition and his backbone; but the man who MARRIES riches for them with hie individuality, his self-respect and his freedom. And ti } harder he tries NOT to pay in devotion and self-effacement the higher he § pays in moral deterioration, { | 6 18 wife's money” has ruined many a nice, clean, ambitious youny H man, who might have made his life worth while if he had never touched it. “His wife's money” has made many a man hate the woman who doled it out to him when he might have loved her if she had been Door. “His wife’e mommy” has made many a brute out of a gentleman and many a mollycoddie out of a man. Why? Because there is no such thing asa “new woman"—at heart. Every woman is a primeval being, born witl the instinct to adore, to cling and above all to LOOK look up to a husband who has been “bought and paid for,” a householdornh= ment that costs her eo much per month in dollars and cents. A women may slave for a man, suffer for him, die for him, and stilt worship him, but the moment she hands him money she blyshesvfor him. And the man-who-marries-for-money knows it, and in his own hea he hates her for it, as he bat himeelf. Poor Little Rich Girl! The only jf] chance of happiness for her is to marry a man richer than herself, or tuff marry a poor man and go live on his ealary, be it ever so humble; give up her motor car and her rose-colored existence and BE a “poor young man’s wife.” The man who \ orks for money earns it by the sweat of the brow, but the man who marries for money earns it by the sweat of his heart and) the shrinkage of the soul. The PRICE OF MONEY is heavy indeed! You may buy a title, you may buy popularity, you may buy a wedding; certificate and a wedding ring—but husbands, like love (REAL husbands), cannot be “bought and paid for.” A Club for Husba | ‘The Curse of “His Wife's Money.” 4 My Wife’s Husband —==By Dale Drummond = Copyright, 1915, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening Workd), ‘VII. are honest for once!” CRAPS AR, = i to come}. “2 didn't mean that, Jane,” I 66 forget apologetically, seeing: my mistake, “ home early #0 that! really cannot go because of my em you will have time to Brot AAA Pe wee 1 oy dress,” Jane said as I at al lemming Sleft the luncheon table, |! your attitude,” %: y more excuses,’ “Drese—drese for what?’ I asked, | she said, wearily. ‘I'll telephone surprised. Flora we are not coming, “For Mrs, Hemming’s ihe cen U7 to Gil oRe peony accepted the invitation a week ago.” |, ,yyny don’t you be sensible and’ go) I had forgotten all about it, al- “I have peen sensible though I now remembered telling and gous without you, until people are gossip- ping about me, saying you me—which you do, ahemetaly, "Bat I don’t choose to have the sympathy Of the town because of it!” “I think you are very silly not to “Will. muvver when you i rom, daddy?” ‘ittle Sonn asked, Ing me. “No, son, mother never cries, She's” ag, nosy 94 I realise, pts ¥ ‘es, she does, sometimes, and”——=- “Martha, room, p! .” Jane said, j ‘So you absolutely” refuse’ to See aera a eo r ¢l Martha and John. “Jane, be a good sensible orld.” ° you realise that you have been with me for months? I can you so cold, x4 of @ remedy that has Prosperity to some people means to eat and alwaye tacks on Nastvitle Banner sia a game with as little as possible and even {nine of having o taut stockings for good wear, - Don’ read | think he is treating me unfairly, reags r weet. ors? his ‘allowance to me is so email that I am obliged to do a little extra work now and then to earn few oper ie athe, and sister not too old or to go out to businens, died DOWN-HEARTED, Travellers, A * + the Editor of The Kvening W ‘What traveller can decide this teresting point? $8 claims that there are no places in America where, at certain times, there ia rain descendin; from the clouds which (both rain and clouds) can be plainly seen but which never reaches the ground, as it ts con- | sumed by the heat of t! @ person looking upward can iy see a rainstorm going on above and renee, Sa Pred by MS touches " eays that there are euc! places in Ai » Who can decid CHARLES R. Just then a cat, which had not been working Iate at the books and hence had no excuse to be out at that hour, dashed across the street past Mr. Jerr. “Whoop!” yelled Mr, Jarr, for though tired he was playful. ‘It’ good luck for a cat to cross your path, ub?" 66 HAT was quite a record the | T Pring Eitvi Friedrich hung up in her 65,000 mile cruise,” said the head polisher, “It doesn't force any three rousini cheers from me,” said the laundry t of war- ‘fare to a | but 1 can’t scare up a thrill over a | vessel carrying heavy guns wayiaying ja tramp steamship or a aailing ship in mid-ocean, taking off her stores t ang blowing @ hole in her with dyna- te, “Neither can I enthuse over sub- marine attacks on unarmed merchant ships, Admitting that the necessities r justify such attacks, there is kee! The Week’s Wash ee in the large majority of cases tried. And again, when, oh when, will my sisters realise that you cannot trifle with nature—that very often when you improve on her it is at the ex- penee of health and vi often life iteelf—na, in this case’ ‘ertainl; every woman owes it to herself to tltose about her to look as well as she can at all ages and stages of life. them. Submarine work is hazardous; so is burglary. “As to the Prins Bitel Friedrich cruising 66,000 miles, do cruisers and battleships of Japan, Australia, England and France, that ry ra to have been a matter of luck combined with good seaman- ship. By keeping away from the ree, lar steamship lanes the Prins Eitel olded obs: and wa captain of one of the ships sunk by the Prinz Eitel Friedrich sizes up ti matter pretty well when he says ‘had the luck of @ fat Chinaman.’ If he rman ‘barnack he “aver ‘wech sighted ‘By. '& British or French cruiser it would 4 RSA eh, hustling young commander of the Pring ital wrieerien la in Dutch stood, um « victim of unjus’ sus-sus- Dishus!” Mr. Jarr meant to suspicions but miscued. “Ob, it’s all right,” sald Mre. Jar, yawning. “You were due for this a week ago. Come on to bed.” 4 222 B te dened in a peculler fant made her appear like some wild " thing. You may improve on neture, but| tempt!” said Mr. Jarr. And he tried not at her expense. to ery but couldn't. By Martin Green have been ‘Good night, Prins!’ “From prevailing indications hy’ pol! fe ae is quite pais se Ld face of the returns,” re] o laundry man, his Government, so Reha somebo ly in his own adminis- “Tt looks as though tration has put the Governor in @ Government will come to the front|hole. He has already admitted that with a little matter of six or seven|he was hundred thousand dollars for the owners of the William P, Frye with announced that the State would have and to levy a direct tax of $18,000,000. her cargo. Germany could do awhole; “When a man admits he is nearly t in the way helping out her|half wrong there is tification for army with that muoh money.” g@uspicion that he is ly wrong. | SARA RRARARAARARAR AAA b jseome to me that the main question 1 “Nearly Halt Wrong}. | Wag eave the Governor his Aree rT} HAT Go you think of that “He is not an exper and he didn't go to the Comp’ dispute between the Gov- Cc troller Travis, if a0, why? ernor and the Gertainty, the books of the Biaie can. be condition office and look over the books him- aelf, Were his figures furnished by Cor the Glynn administration qver the not much a muddied pi r treatin’ mub with con-' . go to this dinner without pss | aocie' tao, it's because of your dislike to Mr. Hemming that oa onde) to ac- company me, not use of your professional pride? I am glad you that an honest mistake of $18,000,000 ia be made.” $8,000,000 too strong when he) coul t All Demand, Ne Su; 4, : BEE,” said the head polisher, | ‘that the Public Library has been swamped by citizens clamoring for accurate information | ¢; about the European war. m said the laundry man, “judging from the wer conversations T hear citizens, very few of them are get! it" call Mrs, Hemming myself and plain why I cannot come She saguse me, Tn sure, ‘ery well,” again; “I wilt only to this aw but Tm _ invited. have sat at waiting for you for the last So if you care to talk to Mra, ming, here she is,” handing me receiver as central gave her number, oi I explained the situatio: Hemming, laying great tren Ay disappointment, greater than ta peve done had Jane not been I tf) ni telling’ her o} necessity that called m swale ey Or ood tast Bry Webb would: ( offended shou! not ape pelptnent feds him, oy Py; .,! | | { “No, I have just persuaded se without me, although she urally is embari at my fection at the last moment.” “T wi tand, and I'll forgive wa I repeated her jast remark who smiled queerly an e hi? it is no casy f wife to derstand, tant ithe (To Be Continued.) od {

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