The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1915, Page 14

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Wiorid. POTAPLIGNED HY fosmrn 5 IT POR Pediiadet Daily Hacert Bur by the Preas Pobiiahing . . ° i “i Fors tow. New Fors sour n'y Neer etiaty : Os Bs Es ~| or | ot the vice at New York an Rerontc inne Ma‘ 4 Oceartticn Wales is Pa Wrendua [Yor Bnetant ont World tor the Unites #tates Ail Countries ond “erate mm One Tear One Mer One Your wr * Month ‘ —— VOLUME 55......... 966 0seenueses NO. 19,578 b Paw tow ? @ here fue KEEP IT CLEAR OF POLITICS. OR the credit of New York State, politics » hes this week This measure, for which The Even World has ng fought fe now familiar, Under its provisions the State, net f inuintant ing the dependent child by herding tam with b the money to the mother and keeps him u Thet the child brought up by « mother's care will turn out @ happier, better citizen than one who grows up in tiv soul-de Preering atmosphere of an inetitution needs no On the side of humanity and common sense the bill i# ite own argument { others, gives home influence tonstration On the business side it is aleo strong It covte #1179 a month te keep a child in @ State inetitution. In the twenty-two States that have widows’ pension laws the cost of keeping the child at home har averaged about $6.50 In the last few month Arizona, Wyoming and Tennessee have been added to the list of commonwealths that aid the clild by aiding the mother. The plan is economical, hamane, progressive. Pablic in this State has approved it. No eelf-r ting Legislature ean do otherwise than adopt it. Hl -¢eo— | ‘ ‘The fall of Praemys! prepares the way for an Invasion of Hungary. More consonantal combinations to conquer, WIFE'S EARNINGS HER OWN? T" question whether or not a wife's earningy belong to her hua- band is no more settled for the legal than for the lay mind. | Attorney Robert W. May of Brooklyn assures The Eve- ning World that “the learned Judge was wrong in his decision.” ‘To prove it he quotes from the Domestic Relations Law of 1909, Art, 4: CERTAIN RIGHTS AND LIABILITIES OF HUSBAND AND WIFE, | Bec. 60. Married woman's right of action for wages, A married woman shall have @ cause of action in her sole and separate right for all wages, salary, profits, compensation, or other remuneration for which she may render work, labor or services, or which may be derived from any trade, business or e@coupation carried on by , and her husband shall have no right of ection therefor, unless she or he, with her knowledge and consent, has otherwise expressly agreed with the person obligated to pay such wages, salary, profits, compensation or other remuneration. In any action or proceeding in which a married woman or her husband shall seck to recover wages, \) salary, profits, compensation or other remuneration for which such married woman has rendered work, labor or services, or which was derived from any trade, business or occupation car i ried on by her, or in which the Joss of such wages, salary, SPRING SPROUT MEDICINE (BAD _ (Business j \ 4 SPRINGKLINGS -( = — {Smee Heke The profits, compensation or other remuneration shall be an item of damage claimed by a married woman or her husband, the pre- sumption of law in all such cases shall be THAT SUCH MAR- RIED WOMAN IS ALONE ENTITLED THERETO, unless the contrary expressly appears. Here’s a handy siege gun with which to bombard Justice Mors- @hauser’s now famous decision, We hasten to pass it on to the auf- tragiate, baie’ By Roy L. ———_—_<42-—_—— Zeppelin raids on Paria are not inspiring. Frightening old women to death is wretched warfare and worse pastime, | 6é LL I could aay to myself was, A ‘Wonders will never cease!’ And it wan all I could do to keep from laughing right in her face when she told it to me, but of course | 1 didn't, because I am too polite even | M +o -—— to think contemptuously of my friends, not being like @ome other A PRESSING TRAFFIC PROBLEM. people I know,” said Mra, Jarr, OW can traffic be most expen uonely handled at the Sroaslng | Gan Wats, sini ho wae WONG RP of two important thoroughfares ? |for her usual after-dinner loquacity, Jet her rave. With Mra, Jarr it was elthor a col- loquial feast or a@ conversational famine when she spoke to Mr. Jarr, For nome times she waa not apenk- ing to him at all and af other times ashe was not doing anything but talking to him, Mr, Jarr preferred her avalanches of words rather than the cold glaziers of her silence, for, So pressing has this problem become in New York that the Municipal Art Society offers prizes of $300, $200 and $100 for the three best solutions, Competing architects may pull down build- ings, put through new streets, change levels or do anything else they think desirable Venerable European municipalities, after years of experience, fall back on the simple device of cutting off the square corners of the intersecting streets in concave curves that make a circle of the cross- ing, putting a fountain or other landmark in the centre and keeping wee ee poope| 7 lee Saat he traffic in continuous rotary movement that knows practically no halt.| peace reigned, if not quiet, For, New Yorkers see thie plan in partial operation at Columbus | strange to say, tp the domeatic re- Oircle. It works well for traffic, If treated with taste and uni-| ton Where tere ts quiet there ts formity the architecturel scheme produces wide, handsome “circuses,” ina gage BP RAE Ber ror a es Londoners call them, that set off monuments, make street vistas| “Of course,” she continued, “when attractive and add to the beauty and variety of the city, everybody te talking about hard With ingenious use of different levels New York engineers can Lisp wg LABS SHORE NAP IRD certainly devise something more complicated. We doubt if they hit rope, it seems strange to me that those people should be just rolling in on anything cheaper or more sightly. + money, although they are all the time talking of stagnation in Wall Street; but the less some people have Colored lights with classic music may interest some folks. But when it comes to high-brow concerts a good many of us “aten better with our eyes shut.” the more others possess, But I aup- Hits From Sharp Wits. pose it i# ‘Mizpah,’ as the Bible or Shakespeare saya—no, the word in ‘Kismet, or some other Greek pression that people use who we. probably noticed that #ome people can biuff their way along @ whole lot easier than others can pay their fare.—Philadelphia Tel- ee rr Some men have reasons to advance eee for thelr failure, but on the other hand if they were suc would be no! Nashville Banner. . subscribe to magazines, but all I got to say is that it is ridiculous! “Of course 1 don't begrudge them,” Mrs, Jarre went on, “for the only way to get on with ric people is never to ask them for anything; and, anyway, I think myself as good he is and wouldn't take anything from her if she offered it to me, even if It was meant for you, altiough I know ahe is too stingy to do so, Anyway, her buat is a full 44 and 1am a perfect 36; but the idea of that man—the ideal" This was too much for Mr, Jarr at last and he remarsed mildly: “Now that you bave paused for breath, will you kindly tell me what you are talking abou! and whom are You hay A man who apecializes tn theories expects others to make them work. Albany Journal With some people there is leas con- cern as to what & man measures around his waist than what he Measures around the pocketbook.— Mnoxville Journal and Tribune. eee An ogotist 18 a per who won't Jet you talk ‘ out yourself, 8 Once in a great while a man writes a jetter to the nowspaper because he is Uckled to death about something.— Toledo Blade. One reason why people like to give advice that their giving does not diminish their supply. Letters From the People The Jarr Family ‘Copyright, 1015, by The I'res Publidhing Ov, (The New York Brening World), Japanese were not at all popular, #0 valet if we could afford all the mod- ern inconveniences,” said Mr. Jarr. course, if IA these Swastika pins and want you to | Usually “THE SPRING TRA LA SPRING CLEANING Flowers THAT Loom In would have a personal maid to mas- sage my face and fix me up—as Clara Mudridge-Smith has—only I wouldn't be at any maid's mercy and let her be impudent to me, as Clara Mud- ridge-Smith'’s maid is to her; but that’s because Clara gets familiar with the girl, And I might have a German fraulein or French maid for the children if we were millionaires, especially now, since the war, one can get them cheap, But @ valet, no! And 1 can't get over that uncouth man Stryver having one.” “Then you won't conalder Mr. Stry- ver’s valet ‘a gentleman’a gentle- man?” said Mr. Jarr, “Not at all” Mrs, Jarr anawered, “And, speaking of valeta, take that auit off so I can prons it.” McCardell Jarr, one!" “Oh, you think you are funny!” eald Mra. Jarr testily. “Haven't I been telling yousthat Mra. Stryver told me Stryver has engaged a Japanese valet? But I told her that we were wolng out to California, where the “Trust mo with the secret, little she saw that 1 was not at all envious that her husband had a valet.” "Oh, 1 guess you'd let ME have a “Indeed, no," replied Mrs. Jarr. “Of we had lota of money, I The Dower of Beauty : By Marie Montaigne 5, by The Prose Publishing Oo, (The New York Krening World), Moulding a Beautiful Arm. BBAUTIFULLY modelled arm exerts a wonderful witchery over be- holders, Such arms are as rare as outdoor roses in December, Evon more rare is the perfectly moulded arm, accompanied by a milk-white satiny skin with a soft flush of life through the whiteness, An arm may be made to possess both these beau- tea. A most valuable exercise for de- veloping the lower arm, which Is usually acrawny or unovenly de- veloped, is by pushing with force. ‘Tho arme of shopgiris who push all day at a pneumatic tube for send- ing cash about,,and the arma of houseworkers, whose tasks compel strenuous pushing every day, are beautifully developed trom elbow to wrist, as well ax symmetric. ally moulded from tho shoulder, The upper arm of a Woman generally ‘ takes care of itself, except in the matter of skin texture; but every woman should make It her duty to push hard, every day, at a bag of sand, a soft mattress, or a punching ball or large pillow. Throwing the medicine ball, too, in a way that uses the lower muscles without straining the upper ones, is another admirable exorcise for filling out the lower ams, Whatever the form of exercise taken, however, remember that it ts important to tense the muscles, To do this, clench the fists, or stretoh the hands in such a manner that the muscles will be ten: Copyrieint, 1 you talking about? Man or woman?” “Why, you know very well I am talking about those BStryvers! With all the money they have and the eilly things they do with it, it is no wonde: Afth Street” or “Mr, Smith and me] nearly laughed in her face when went to One Hundred and Twenty-| she told me.” Atte Binet? . aa 2 Puwes The Former Is Correct, Bo the Editor of The Evening World: ‘To the Editor of The Brening World: ‘Where can I Gnd a list of States] Which is right, “Mr, Smith and I ‘women ean vote, and other de-|went to One Hundred and Twenty- guah as dates of the amend- coenin, ee. Pan Se, “What did obé tell yout” asked Mr, desired. = A f TENSING Mr. Jarr Chooses a Colloquial Feast Rather Than a Conversational Famine ald Mr. Jarr; “but I wouldn't let me hire ® valet, as Mr, Stryver has.” ‘Don't worry about hiring « valet,” said Mra. Jarr. “You married one.” And Mr. Jarr retired abashed. So Wags the World. By Clarence L. Cullen. mrt ins Voc vec Weathns O% ECAUSE a man Is “finished” it doesn't necessarily follow that he's all through. A lot has been written, and will be, About the rawness and the upturned- nosedness of the cub who returns to the parental crib just after quitting college, A chivalric sense of a si perlor kind stays the pens of the un- ollers of this kind of piffle trom xpatiating upon the unspeakableness and the extraordinariness of the young woman who returns home di- rect from Miss F 7 Pate a8 Fussemup's Finishing Yes, we've read a lot of written by the fellows wito claita terre built themselves magnificent. bunga- lows of stone, rubble, concrete, dec. somewhere out in the country, at & total cost of just a few bucks, and who then are offered six thousand manganese men, or some sich trivial matter, for their home-made, hand- built shacks, So, likewise, have wo Foad the narrative of Ol Doc" Cook an © adventures Munchausen, St ie Bares Sometimes we wonder just often, in a given number o ant hapbens that the ambitious but lo: salaried young feller, on an evening previously arranged by tho girl her self and looked forward to with trembling and trepidation, slinks into the “Hbrary” to ask the Old Man's permission to marry his daughter. Somehow we believe that if such stac tistics could be collected, the figures would look like one of thosee battind averages of a pitcher. For verily, Verily, Bil, the Old) Man wasn't, as a rule, rn next T and_ ho isn't overlooking any white chips, and he knows a good chance when it rises right out of the ground and Wallops him on the wishbone, Nearly every day, on Rive Drive, wo see a fatccherked bing eyed baby being propelled in'a mage niflcent white-lacquered perambula- tor by a “bonne.” with one of those strangely un-American “bonne” caps or hats, or whatever they are, with elaborate apron and all that sort of wishy-Waahy thing, while the infant's toddling sister is led along by another of the “bonne” species in the same kind of a make-up, The father of these children arrived in the United States in the steerage, with all of his and then slowly relax them, This must be repeated both with the arma Tet down, out at the «ides, and up above Miscues the head, Tensing the lower mus- DEVELOP clos will develop @ rounded lower rm and wrist and add to the general BEAST ymmetry, Proper skin treatment will add the whiteness and texture p ¢ pee — ee ‘ ae possessions in 4 red bandanna hand- kerehief, leas than a quarter of a century ago. It's a great little Ameri- ca! But why, after all, the “bonnes?” It's the fellow who says “I hate to talk of myself’ who never does much of anything elas, | 66 | wreatent curse in th Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland ere (he Ume be marrion, a bach # heart has been preesed, rivaned oa mended eo often that it will barely bold together through the bopey® The wen goes th te band siret hed out @ the woman in dea him ae and the viretehed beat war. off the woman whe le Charing hits Dont funey a than regards you seriously as long ar he te proud to bew@ wen look at you, walt Until he begins to wonder why they do It. Juere ie go such thing as a “pew woman,” every normal git fo @ primeval Delng, Who has to be taken by bak hatr, clubbed tnto fim ponstbility ond dragged three times around # man's tent before she cap Oe eure that be “loves” ber When they talk of “luck in love,” « woman thinks proudly of the mag she has just caught, While @ man thinks prayerfully of the woman be Ba@ just—uncaugbt Hashful men sometimes make the most fasctnating sort of lovers, B& cause they leave so much to # girl's imagination ‘The moment a man ts dead sure that he has won a girl's beart, he be kins to wonder if he is dead sure that he wants it A man who has never been in love nor flown in an aeroplane doesn know what @ poignant shock of relief it 1s to come down to earth safely again, after a dizzy spin among the cloude ‘There iw nothing Hike a little “absent” treatment to cure a man of thag tired feeling, and make him see your charms ip a new and glowing Mbt. If one woman could afford a man all the charms, virtues and accome | plishments of a whole harem, he would still want another, just because 6be was “different.” «Extravagantitis.” The Modern Woman's Worst Malady. By Sophie Irene Loeb. a right, 1013, by The Drew Publishing Co, (The New York Hrening World), in general— and knitting shawls, which formerly, she had just done for pleasure, taught others, and finally wrote litt articles for the magazines, and thug’ made enough to support ily and have a little besides, 8) rather, much rather, spend more time in the care of her children and h but when need came she was found wanting. Sho did not whine? and complain, She just works Her husband, now that he is again the bread winner, does not want her. crifice the welfare of the home ntinued employment. Yet how many husbands are there who WILL let a woman work ; fingor ends off and think, with now twentieth century Coy MERICANS and New York women in particular — are suffering from the modern disease, Extravagantitis. The © United States, the most powerful of the agencies that make for our destruction, is the na- tional lack of thrift. The American man is the most patient, generous, long-suffering, indolent being on | earth. ‘These are the latest utterances on feminine faults by a noted writer and lecturer. philosophy no one may gainsay. Yet whi bh women are spending the money made by their husbands, there is the oth side, There are thousands of wiv to-day supplementing their husband income, and in many cases they are the sole support of the family. This in grandmothe! day would have disgraced the ‘thrifty’ husband, ‘And only the other day a learned judge ruled that such money earned belongs to the “better three-quar- ters." There are hundreds of hu bands who truly become “indolent! when they realize that the wife has earning capacity. The question of who shall earn and who shall spend can never have definite and fixed rule. It is a problem for the indi- vidual tamil: ‘The other day I was in the home of a little woman who was just that day relieved from the hardship not only of fostering her family, but finan- cing it as well, Her husband had lost. his position, and for over two years, through illness, most of the time was unable to keep employment. She went togwork at making lace For, in the average the question of happin answered by that of economics. Unromantic as It may sound, thera” 1s something in the adage “When” poverty creeps in at the door, k files out of the window.” And tb cause of love's flight Is mainly dug to the partnership bein, sided, It is not always money; but rather a share in SPONSIBILITY, especially in time of: need, Gone ts the day when woman was so much chattel and was upheld by clety for it. Equality — m oe EQUAL BURDEN as well = FRUITS of effort. The safe gen plan to follow is to make your effort fit the need, whether it be in the’ home or in the bee-hive of busin It is the unwise who quarrel with their bread and butter which comes, first in the realm of double harneas.. Learn to earn in time of prosperity, so that when poverty knocks he ‘will find you out, My Wife’s Husband —=By Dale Drummond == Caperight, 1010, ty Tee Pree Hupliening On, ({'be New Kore traning World), CHAPTER XXI. ‘Was Mrs. Hemming 111?" ‘Yes, the very day after we HAD missed Jane and 16] sno™wag taken’ with one of ber baby very much indeed an turna” 1 was very pleased when “Then you couldn't go about a ahe wired thoy would be at much, DORs, pera pleased, “Wo certainly did. Flora home in the morning. I told| sick enough to need any o = reat Martha to have everything in readi- ness for their coming. only enough to not feel like going “gure, I have sir," she answered, “I about herself.” “You mean that you and H have ordered a chicken for dinner. You know Master John loves chieke went out and left her alone?” 4 “Why, yes. Was there anything om “phat's right, Martha, have & Bice - dinner, I'm tired of eating alone,’ strange in that? She didn't object, Should I let @ call walt and meot don't see why you should.” “Perhaps she didn't because ghe knew it would do no good If she ” re ee call] teertaeeeneeees « ‘should T go and make m Jane: or heceswary one—and meet her at home? 1 hesitated some time over the question, then, rather than have “Perhal nonchalantly. - “Jane, I don't like the {dea of my femming bring her home, 1 Ld to drive the runabout to the wife going about with Lucius Heme ming. His reputation is none of the best,” thinking of what Doctor Tobiah 1 meet Jane and the baby, lay eaeyen I felt, | could not help noticing how well Jane looked. Her had intimated, “What do you mean?” flushing. “I never heard a word against him." “That's neither here nor there, I tyes sparkled, and she looked bright} dont wish you to be with him unless Oye DRY, ma ad Mra, Hemming js also along. I cere Wrhere Ia no need to ask if you had | trinly shouldn't have allowed you to go a good time!” 1 remarked stiffly a8 1) \o Chicago had 1 known that you ong. 4 ei Thad a perfectly glor- mane do #0," [| “Don't be a kill-joy, Georg fous time ane returned, “and doesn’t 7, ‘se, John look well? had @ fine time neither go Yourself or want me-to ges Just because you don’t care for Ay mt you dear? toe ait gia! and, daddy, Grandma time, you can’t understand why I want one, You are enjoying yourselt ia Herrick said you was to come next 1 told it right, didn’t I, your own way. Now please let me en- », There! joy myself in mine!" thou, + ney et a ended the matter. BM, “Yes, dear, exactly right,” laughing,| Jane and I had another caune of dla, then explaining, "Mother impressed he was to deliver her mes- John that hi Mee ey agreement just at this time, had been a kindergarten opened ING the, S just as she gave town and I wished John to go, , sage, just Os reached the house, ths | objected, thinking him too yeung™"*- anger in my heart and the disappoin'-| “Why, he's nothing but @ baby,” she ers dispelled by @ little child, mye A were at dinner Jane asked how I was getting along with the car, objected, “He'll never be anythin, coddle him #0 much,” I melee it rm ld her very Well, but that it was{ “But he 18 a bab: George, 1 tote more than I had expected, but | Jane insisted, “and T want’ hit ete tead of saying, “I told you 80," nany women would have done,” she y said: only var mind, it won't cost so much me. There ts nothing they teach at the kindergarten that Tcantt ies at home. Another year will hie enough for him to go to school,” lwhen you get more accustomed to it,|‘Then she added, “I N) indy gractice tn growing all-ehe | met” ed, "I NEED ‘him with time so that you won’ ve to worry.” ion't 00 with ba Mee you had a good time?” 1 asked | wait a iitte™ mele eet nt we felt. “BUT an to your nena, ter in the ¢' atthe best rt Jane roplied en- oe that’ sense!" thusiantically, "The ‘only ‘unpleasant | nonsense, nd that eho” thing that happened was ‘a Ul. | little John’s company, I Continued.)

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