The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1915, Page 10

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‘prevention of cruelty organizations it protects them and the public a a The Even ¥ i ety, f tle tary | . 'y and to my plant “ i “ the t . ¢ r t ‘ Mayor wonder the action of the State's ¢ “ie a forerunne Ss New York It may be that Gov, Whitman is trying to diseipline the city into @ state of mind favorable to precartous polittes for a public future bargains Tf #0, he ie playing servant of his profemed prineipler a Out of a smokefilled theatre a matinee @ thousand New Yorkers filed calmly through the exits into the street. Could they be counted on not to Meelves to death trying to crowd into the first trolley A REASONABLE PLEA. WNERS and users of work horses in this city are trying to have the Anti-Cruelty Laws amended ao that agents of pri vate societies for the prevention of cruelty shall no longer take the law into their own hands, but shall be required either to iseue &@ summons or to call upon a policeman to make arrests which they deem necessary, The amendment further provides that all fines col- , lected for violations of the Anti-Cruelty Laws must be paid into the | public treasury. * “The payment of fines into the treasury of private soct- | eties,” declare the petitioners, “serves to induce unnecessary | | | ' arrests, is contrary to the principles of justice and violates a constitutional provision, in that it permits the expenditure of public moneys for the benefit and ald of a corporation for {ts own use and property. “Any procedure which permits the complaining witness to take the role of prosecutor and to have a pecuniary Interest fin the result of the case {s contrary to every principle of law * and justice.” The petitioners point out that many arrests for cruelty to ani- mals “are cases where the cruelty is questionable, to say the least.” They believe that the issuance of a summons would prove a better and fairer way of getting at the facts. Moreover, under the amended act, any society agent, paid or voluntary, and indeed, any citizen, can call upon a policeman to make an arrest for cruelty upon the com- plaint of a witness of the act. There is reason in the stand of the drivers and owners. In many cases arbitrary arrests by zealous agents mean that tea.as are left stand- ing in the streets, their loads undelivered and the horses themselves finally taken to some out of the way stable. Unnecessary inconven- | fence and delay are thereby imposed upon wholly innocent people. The regular course of arrest or summons seems a more orderly and safe procedure. Without impairing the admirable work of the from consequences of mistake or confusion, a As the President says, a great many foolish people in this country are “trying to rock the boat. It doern't budge the boat, But it riles the rowers. —4e———--—__— THE F.4. HE sinking of the F-4 with her crew of nineteen off Honolulu | is almost the first submarine disaster to overtake the United | States navy. Even before the war France and England became familiar with grim tragedies of this sort. Profiting by their experience, American | naval authorities caused boats of the P-4 type to be built with big igon eyes on the outer surface into which grappling hooks might catch, | B@ no air-filled boat, even of toughest steel, and withstand the terrific pressure. Nor until the law of gravity | can be annulled or suspended can such disasters be averted, | Far more than the airship, the submarine is the ere instrument of war. In the war onstrated its power, Even its peril. an sink in deep water | ashed waters of Europe it has dem- aceful manoeuvres suffice to prove ——_§-<¢<2-——___—_— War has furrowed a Kaiser's face, Also a continent's. Hits From Sharp Wits. The best remedy for an attack of{than one establishment at a time swelled head is to sit down and re-} When sho ts married she is willing to member the many times that one has} quit the office —Nashvillo Banner done foolish things, | ras aula ° yd the Man 5 too much fy One way to keep out of debt is Never to spend money which one| photographer, merely expects to get.—Albany Jour- eo 8 nal, It tickles a man more to be patted 28 on the back than to be touch The other fellow's troubles are|the short ribs. wever entertaining to the man who . das troubles of hig own. V under jeret: Nows, . Which had you rather do, give yourself away or feel like somebod Spring is just one take-'om-off day. | had “wold” you. Memphis Commer. then one put-'em-on day after an-|clal Appeal, other. oe ba e488 Now and then one runs across a It may be observed of the good] person who seems tc be thankfnl that | tion and} —e ing World Daily Magazine. Saturday, March 27, 1915 FOLDED NAPICIN PuRSE \ HAT STREAMERS ARE ALL THE GO Tus SPriig Xow PicTURE HAT Mr. Jarr Reaps a Peck of Trouble By Trying to Be a Home-Humorist “Rut Mrs, Kittingly told me I “Yes,” sald Mr. Jarr, “because it was wrong In the matter. said|sets off the beauty of the sweetest she generally married spe girl I know tlemen, although she always wanted} Mrs, Jarr smiled. to marry a solld business man, and] more than alimc ny, maybe she would the next time she | == = =— married, if fate and destiny threw her ; ¢ ” in the way of a business man who taster Gift Making. could appreciate her simple, trustful | ' would seem that the pleas of the antl-gift makers of which we nature." But a speculative gentleman might hear so much at Christmas time re quite futile, as will readily be have no income at all at the time, and #0 how could the courts fix a goodly | seen if one now makes a tour of the The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Cop nent, WS. by The Pree Pubimaig fo (The New York byenng World) BOW do you like my new] “Well, I wouldn't go as far as to hat for aster?” asked} say that," she admitted, “But L will Mrs, Jarr. “It's a@ Tip-| say that if 1 had half the money (o Nye dress on that Clara Mudridge-Smith It's a Long, Long Way From] or Mrs. Stryver or Mrs, Kittingly nave, T ppera * hummed Mr, Jarr. 1 would look as chic as any of faem, 1 “It is not, it's the real thing! wonder if Mra, Kittingly is e¥ll get- I might have known you would poke | ting alimony from her first two hus- fun at it!” ‘Then her exproasion | bands? I met her in a stare down- | Cincy for the injured Indy?” asked |snops, ‘These changed to one of injured suffering, | town the other day, and she told me] yi ytbp Batre sees " its ’ “Don't you ever pretend to me} she was living very happily with her!" why, that's what 1 said; but Mrs. re OS . i. ’ fats trade quite vain that you don't know what's} third husband, because he was very | Kittingly told me that whe always! Chistes beanie thy eo to that of "she said. You saw at | Jealous of her, and that’s a great com | jooked with innocent trustfuiness at |CMTStmas and in all of thom the lily once this was a cheap and tacky hat, | Pliment when a blond woman ts 4 Jarr. Kind words are \y oisaes what in w hat,” the Judge to show she was tnnocent! purple tints is. quite § 1 wanted to get one of the now] Ung over 85, But she said she thought! o¢ the ways of the world; and, as she | part of the ahon nowallayh aa i trimmed sailors, but the kind []8he would have to divorce him, be-| said, the Judges always allowed her | tho holly with its brigat red and wanted I couldn't afford. And when | cause everything was going up so in| jineral alimony. She was buying a hy Ppetiaray theta 1 do buy one within my means, in-{ Price that tt was better to have a| sixty dollar Easter ha stoad of praising me and saying ateady income of alimony than to de- semething nice ubout the hat, even if] Pend on a varying allowance from you see it is a cheap little thing, you | one’s husband,” make fun of it." Why, L like it surprise Yes, | suppose you do Ike tt,” merriment seems to pervade the at- “If you had married a speculative |musphere this now takes the form avs 4 of a deeper tecling~somewhat akin gentleman, or two, you mjght have to lov and gractude-—and wii a Christmas gift under com- frequently under prote: or gift is presented because one Wants to do the nice thing to somebody cared for. It is @ frec-will been buying a sixty dollar one also,” don't see why,” said Mr. Jarr,| suggested Mr. Jarr. hat money a husband gives to his ‘No, thanks!" said Mrs, Jarr arch- wife t# all he The alimony the! jy, “I'd rather be as I am, married | said Mr. Jarr in wilmpered Mrs, Jarr, “You Uke it}only @ certain proportion of the|circumstances—and get all he makes! | the true spirit of satisfactory gift. bocause you think it's good enough for | wreteh's income." And." she added, “you do think my! ™f Anything Is good enough for me,| “That's what 1 said” replied Mra.! Tipperary hat ls becoming?” | aot prone Ses. ter. but Clara Mudridge-simith or Mrs, !—— le Stryver, of even ubat dreadful blond | Gwenn divorces, Mrs, Kittingly, wouldn't let | When the «Biue Bird” Flies Away woll be encouraged, i ster gift also takea an en- tirely different form from that pi dat Christmas, and ts by no Why, even Mrs. Rangle turned up her nose at it, even while she Was saying, how sweet It Was and she wished she their maids wear a hat like that! = By Sophie Irene Loeb === | the Christmas Copneht, Wd by The Drew weg CoO (Pie New York Brenig Word), this genson, and its chief attractive. could afford one Like It!" | ness lies in its duintiness, ‘Maybe sho did ke it! ventu Mr. Jarr, “1 know I like it” very nedy, ‘The argument is with | presented’ in a wh much, ’4, and they have not mado | ribbon, or a box in one of the purple ly than word “Downhearted,” and one |it in time, ‘Mere are some reader says: "Let me say|dows by whieh the blue bird fl whimpered Mrs. Jarre, "Of course, | Hes of the valley | é dent ‘Downheart- | SWA¥! \u pe nose Gurnee ui) antaealiyy Gabi to your corresponden ownnen When you continually tell your wife! loops will enhance its know she meant it for sarcasm sia ee that her husband's bad trait of} how attractive another woman 1s. | fact, ribbon secms espec Pena id afford | 80¢ S1viNg her enough money to get] When you discourage jher in taking | of the star gift, and ¢ sac # could attord| th, Figaro i .|up some study that you aro not in-| white candy boxes hav than that man Rangle does.” | et eter things to your wife before your) across the cover and finished off at Mr. Jusr saw be was only gotting in{ | Neader if this husband who keeps | friends, When you “harp” about | ne corner with a full rosette Dg Ayr setae 3 | bis wife in such straits | your moth family to her dis- | Wrong, deeper and deeper. With that credit, When you tnaist on looking | pox of candy at E ae mind which had made} things from only a man's point of 2 ih “She turned up her nose at. tt"! thrust through the » wished # penurious realigos that by his own selfishness ho is letting the blue bird of happi- ster she will prob- him noted in wholesale woollens as | ' | s t inary ness fly away? His wife is now dis-| When you forget the common cours | irticles of be Au astute salesman and office man Monty artic Spa Mhay Seatented because of dis UNKINdnEss | tesies because she ts “only your) also combine udcfulness. took a quick cony side jump te solid ground in showing preference tor using his hi money eisownere than in his own] she hasn't baains enough to unders | tine "1 don't know much about hats or home. J wonder if this man under} stand the processes od oe Duainges, | , ; said, “ stands that he is not only starving; When you act « ough you hag other feminine frig add, “but | HANES AE ne Ie Oe GD eiuanien | martod en unpaid housekoeper, 1 do know you could buy your hat at) things she craves, but at the samo an you let the habit of silence | {inon the millinery department of @ Five) ume freezing her love for him in the in the home, all the shops are making special dis- {and Yen Cent Store and you would | dieroxpect {hat paturally follows? — | en x0 thinks it le aralnay your |plays in these lines ve ¢ ° " f | boy the blue bird of happiness can!) “manhood” to acknowledge y ave wear it and give it a mart air of! rive only on the constant diet-of| been wrong. When class and distinction that would make! Consideration.» When ail the other dames you mentioned| retuses to recognize th look like second raters in thelr fifty | fairness of giving a wife such p dollar E: of his pay as will make her fee she iv 4 real partner, though he may | ory that you ce: ribbon, the housewife a decorative in or a insist on | ter honesty and! wife's life. When you assume that |are the shop disp! ortion | she is always wrong in the case of an | varied or more that| argument. When you go on the the aster trad lways “make it up" | “As usual, the children's departmen or lids, You have more establishments are with its witondant dainty white and | re one |@S best man and general advisor at; courte award to an injured wife is!to a plain business man in moderate | offering, so to speak, and emboules| « et message and is a custoim| the same tme—if they will come? | means the drain upon the purse that at once, for, you notice, Grant says tusually is Just al he will be small token seems to be the eall of Caen Coursday Hn has been some corre: | Some trait in their make-up that is 1» the wrappings display this can," Jane retorted with un eager- m rye | allowed to continue until it is too late | attribute, for an Haster gift Is to be ness in her voice that should have! the same partner, too, if one is to do spondence = through ‘The | 10%" ping World in answer to} themsely o£ the Wine shades tied with white ribbon, and been listenin: | in either event a cluster of violets or By the way, When a girl receives a alive out here, and that's what it lasting gift, for the candy ginning to have a good this year ‘are not only what in the world could we give thom uty but many of them in place of it? Then, too, who would | One box they meet? n you make her feel that | noticed is really a square basket in white raifla and delicate pink all It holds five pounds of candy, would be if they lived out here dainty bit of finishing my breakfast, and her sister appropriate pict and Melitta replied that she couldn't come, | well, Jewelry has tong heon the deal Bax amber that y present, and here fancy may run Raymond @ man so far| regulating the small detaile of your rampant, for at no time of the year him again,” Dorothy added in a post-|to prohibit my doing it. v sin jewelry more script, utiful than for the lutely of no use, 60 Tam comin: ad Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland “ne oh in. remem “wy why my Deugbior, 1 thow pearh to be “loved? Por 1 eay whte thee, Ht le fer pieesenter te be ADMIRED yea od It te eweeter te be od oth ial before the ong faltered thee married, sud more bh wnte thee y very, (how © mee we! b @reeeth ol) mene eves! Yea pid. how they gene at thee wheresoever thou @uer!, for thou ert the most ATTHACTIVE thing upon the beach! ut afterwa My Deas ch rouge a he scotth WHAT te the matter with thee? Mast thou too upon thy cheek, or te thy bat ewryT pial end i den Before martiane, be oa How delightful te thine innocen slorable! Yea, whenscever thou 1 will inetruct th Pore at thee thy ehildieh questions how howt siedge Come unto we end For thou art SUCH « feminine Little thing!* th Thou askost more questions than an whole kinder Karten, sid koowest lees comcerning practical matiors than a babe ft prit THINK before thou speakert Iefore marriage be admireth thine affectionate ways, and adoreth the aby (alk aod the devotion with which thou regalest thy pet poodie, Hut after marriage he mocketh ther yin How to (he world canst thou Kt the creature? thou not make a DOG of him! Tiefore martiage be “The Cragrance fies Yea, it Intoaleateth a Hut after marriage be (rowneth, ay ing “For the love of Clarice, WHY dost thou put th locks? For tt ecenteth the whole house with ite nolein Kefore marriage he adiireth thy “style, ud ¢ beside thee all Women are unto bua but “imitations. Hut after marriage be saith Why, in t) without st Jbut after marriage he w Grea heavens Ye gods, why dost urmureth thine hair ts as freniinee eon myrrh wad valley ' stuft upon thy wa? item fe good,” @ name of Heaven, eanst thou not pase a looking glass ing therein? Behold, the vanity of # woman ts beyond MY comprehension, for they all look alike to me!* And scorn sitteth upon his mustache luuebtor giinteth tn his eye, Yet if thou shouldst aek him why he docth these things he would answer, saying Because 1 LOVE thee, and would have ‘perfect’ in all things!" Then feed me with flattery and stay me with tlusions! or 1 would rather be deluded than “loved” and happy than “perfect.” Vertly, verily, @ little husband is a eritical thing! Selah Things You Should Know About Yourself Why “First Teeth” Should Be Preserved. HERE are twonty baby or first ee generally absorbed, I pea have| served their purpose. CoM belt) age i When teeth are drawn prematurely fingera and tucs. As they —becuuse decayed--the roots are long generally considered to be only teM-|and firmly attached. A tooth ving porary, they often do not have the] been allowed te decay offers no firm intelligent caro they should, but they | bold to the dentist's instruments, and ss | ae it is usually supposed that any should be watched and preserved Ue} Co aew a baby tooth, the young til the right time for them to b¢ fe] and tender jawbone is often injured, moved. At the first sign of discom-|or the tuoth, being broken, the roots fort a dentist should be consulted, are left In the Jaw to decay, causing and no one but a dentist should de- | eum boils and forming an obstacle in | clde when a tooth should be drawn,|the path of the permanent tooth, and no one but a dentist should] which ts thus forced out of its proper draw one, No child should be al- | Position, causing Irregular teeth, lowed to have a tooth sutficiently de- | The loss to a child of teeth is a se- cayed to ache, and no mother should {Flows one, for the food cannot be be allowed to remain ignorant of the} Properly chewed, The stomach) be- means by which this can be prevented, |Comes overtaxed by unchewed food, ‘The first weth are already formed | digestion Is imperfect and nutrition at birth, and as soon as the first] impaired. Good health and good teeth eight baby teeth appear a soft tooth|are dependent one upon the other, brush should be used and that regu-| Food chewed by decayed teeth and lar care should follow which alone| diseased gums becomes infected with | will preserve them, ‘Phe second teeth] bacteria, and this, taken Into the in due time force the first ones out,! stomach, makes all sorta of troub! and they come out easily, the roots there. having My Wife’s Husband —==By Dale Drummond = Copyright, Wd, by The Pras Publisiing Co (The New York brenag Word), CHAPTER XXUI. guests. Grant arrived in the morning, : a/nd Dorothy in the afternoon, I met the morning's mail I found them at the train with the runabout, a letter from Grant Ray-| so ploasing Jane, Consequently it was 0 y wi oing @ Very gay little party of four that sat eae ae ne eee oud down to dinner that night. £0 “SORRY | Jane had planned to give an after- spend a few days with U8 noon party, also a dinner (necessarily ad While at Christmas a spirit of{on his way. I was delighted. I bad ia small one), and a theatre party : é while they were with us, Mr. and always boon vory fond of Grant: bUti Mrs Hemming had left cards at once had not seen him since he officiated and they had also issued invitations for dinner in honor of our guests, As usual, I resented this attention, to| tough had it been any one vise T shoul ave nm most cl 5 visit us,” I told Jane, passing her hie) After dinner there were tunic and letter. Seaclng, and “ 1 had not learned the ca 4 with un-| !@W dances watched the others. hata fines" she replied with or | Jane danced beautifully, und I potieed usual animation. jUppose @V°) that Lucius Hemining was very often either Melitta or Dorothy here at|her partner. “They dence well together, don't j1t would make it pleasanter for Mr. they | Raymond; there is so little one can! M | do to entertain here “That's 4 good idea my wedding. “Grant Raymond is coming . Hemming startled mo by her question, I had not known she was Write them} near me, “They certainly do!” I returned; ‘© on Monday” (it was|then, “Why aren't you dancing, Mrs. ‘and 1 don't suppose | Hemming?” he will stay very long.” “Oh, I have had so little practice “We must keep bim as long as wo! in the new steps that I feel em- barrassed, One needs to dance with te box, With purpie told me of her loneliness more plain-| the new dances really well—as well could have done had I Mrs, Butterworth and my husband 0. I don't see Why you can't have ono ‘But they don’t have a chance to of your sisters with you all the time, | dance tovether and they do splendid- o y. how that tuey have Anished schooi."! ly! I'm sure you could, also, if you Hive ae It had just occurred to me that this, tried.” ¥ nthe plain would be an admirable arrangement, @ band of leaving mo free from any responst- er ribbon stretched diagonally bility as to Jane's being left alone. “You think #0?" she answered, In some way she made me feel most uncomfortable, “You know very well that mother | Watched Jane closely would not allow the girls to be buried | ig! Baished dancing, mado my way ‘0 her side, ‘They are just bes | “Haven't you danced enough, Jane? time, and|Don't you think It 1s about time wa |went home?" I asked, Yo, Indeed! I have just promised 1 don’t suppose even you|Mr. Hemming that I would fox trot to see them unmarried wie him,” 07 ch they surely| “You would ploase mo ve: : you would not dance with Tins gaint Jane wrote a note while I was{I'm sure his wife doesn’t like 4 J “You mean you don't like it would amount to! would thelr lives, Ww el I'll dance it with you PO but that Dorothy would be with us You know very well I can’t dance on Monday. the thing!" I replied, angrily, I remember that good looking Mr. ‘And like everything else, because sind to seo| tt doesn't interest you, you would like “Melitta la in love and abso-| Mr. Hemming, I'm all reaay nasty, d the room to where we stood Melitta was the eldest, but Dorothy | as the music started up, was iny favorite, We laughed gayly, Tecowled, but it made no difre: loser that he seldom loses.—Nash-| he has nothing to be thankful for. style In your litte flager than those | gain for himself or others more in| by material gifts. are just running over with suggestions over her description of Melitta’s con-|and Jane was whirled away from ville Banner. Toledo Blade, aforesaid dames have in their whole! money, he loses in that, process. the| “When you allow the demon of feal- |for Faster gifts, and it is especially dition, and sent word at once that|in another man’s arms, 1 determined . . ret Wer: libody, [tilug that money cannot buy—the | ousy to enter every time another man | the child who should be made happy we were delighted to have either. I) to stop her intimacy with the Hem- ‘There isn't anything quite so loving} Every man has to plead guilty to pT mal eaalaat iM Jarr|D4appiness that comes from mutual | looks at her, When you show that !at the blessed Haster season, Most of had seen very little of the girls, as} mings at once, and to that end de- as the relatives of a di miser, {curiosity when a@ girl opens one of his helped soine, and Mra. Jarr) respect, mutual consideration, you do not trust her, And, above all, them look forward to their Easter they were away at boarding school| termined to talk of my plan to mor ° 4 carry-all handbags in bis pres. | tossed her head with modest welf-| In many ways do married partners when you cease to be her friend as gift with quite the same anticipation | when I was courting Jane, to the city, 4 woman never boss more odo Blade. satisfaction. mn nneeepemen G0etroy thelr bappy bearthstone by well as her busband that is theirs at Christmas time. | nday came, and with it our two (Bo Be Continuedg i ° ‘ ee coukamemers <nmames ee ~~ Se ae i

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