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Sve esehiiy word. eTAMAeHRD BT POR rroirreen Puttiohed Melly Facey: Sunday by fhe Preme Poblining Cooper, New Of te ster new York RALLH PULATIOM President 61 Pee Reo ANGIE'S BAY Treaeore €) bare > H PULATERN, Jy be rmery, © Pare Bee wiiak ~~ Win ME loo GRwew One Teer One Mon VOLUME 55 GET ACQUAINTED WITH IT. OR our forefathers, ( F interest ng ave ing and ports “ How many pr h this Sta for the third time since 1840, 0 tteelf at Albany for the bus ment of State law The reve provel of # popular rote be Popular vote calls the convent Spon the accomplxhment Meanwhile, however, a» the the State have an opportunity twenty years—onee in a gene (we wonder if 50,000 «treme now a te become conscious of st ae liv than a6 a vaguely honored serip archives. Said William Barnes yesterday Commerce The voters should be educated that the Constitution (# the people's law (ut of the mouths of bosses—! ——— ste . The charges against Messrs. McCall, Cram, Williams and Wood, incompetents tn the public service, must have been writ ten tn magic ink a PROTECT THE FASTIDIOUS. NEMPLOYED men in this city simple enough to believe work U is work are getting a lot of earnest, effective help. But what about the fastidious unemployed? hand to eave them from insult and injury? Bome 15,000 superior idle who had absent-mindedly registered as | @now fighters were actually hunted up and besought to go forth and | shovel—on Sunday, too! Of course they excused themselves. Com-| missioner Fetherston saw his error and got other men to do the work. | The lodging house authorities were also deeply and properly hu- | miliated. One thought it could raise 1,000 snow shovellers, and actu- Another promised 200 and finally “ally contributed but twelve. cent one. Which only shows that the more careful among thote out of work | will have to withdraw their patronage from some of the regular help- | ie Albany Chamber of PUT EVERY Toevng: Mave ou omtoa” Reont ane Morr on WE CANT Loye the Continee = the teteree Untom - —_—. t = 7 oes work, voters of n every i it through) and I ather somewhere ip the State rogressive law, Is anybody raising o ing organizations. The more sensitivé unemployed are always willing °-—- —— te be “approached.” But delicacy! delicacy! $228,069.54 1s the bill pr T mted to Germany for the sinking of the American sailing vessel, William P. Frye. This is atrict- ly business and includes no charge for the insult. Editorials by Women “TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR MOTHERS, |tsien «say of and the itchen wan K. JARR was peeved, ‘The de- M livery boy had forgotten to | leave the morning paper at . the Janitor had filled with trash and garbage in pails HERE’S to be a Mothers’ School to promote the plan of Mrs.|not yet whintied up for. Stoner, mother of the twelve-year-old Winifred, which sums) The baker had left rye bread tn- up its purpose in “Ten Commandments for Mothers.” stead of rolls, Mrs. Jarr had not done something or other Mr, Jarr had While the criticisms of the cynic may hold that this girl is a child asked her to do and Mr. Jarr was as * prodigy, a genius, and all the rest, yet one cannot combat the truth | full of complaints ua to the futile in- «that the practical principles of the mother are taken from Mother sarnpeiengs) a te Arerese Bee ef _ Nature herself. if he were the verieat millionaire Though the rules for one child may not be adapted for another, | nothing for pd cane there is no good natural’rule that cannot be adapted to any ehild.| 4°" fond of (peaple starviag Its best recommendation lies in i one of the commandments being We have alwa te do it. In a word, this twentieth century of prevention” theory in the development of the child rather than the pound of cure when the mind has matured. death!" growled Mr, Jarr, “The doctrine of Do, rather than Don’t, | trouble is, if .sore of them were starv- ever Say Don’t to Thy Child.” ing, maybe they'd get a hustle on had with us the person who could tell us how not to do a thing; but what we need most is some one to tell us how them and try to have some excuse for exiating.” "Oh, goodness gractous! Don't be- gin this morning!" said Mra. Jarr, mother expounds the “ounce | %® Poured out his coffee, “I've got a dache.” “You wouldn't have a headache ff you took some reasonable care of your- The old idea that “children should be seen and not heard” ha)| * lf" reptled Mr. Jar. “Women dress outgrown its usefulness, if it ever had any, in this era of economics foolishly, dope up on strong tea and ‘end efficiency. Schools or lessons for mothers are a welcome innova- | act !ike ninnies generally. ‘Then, when tion. Every mother wants the best for her child. But ignorance as tay feet barr ro Fish te ue ‘ n to what is best has retarded her greatest hope and has caused her iy! a ds and the children later suffering. All students of mothercraft find the main fault of our future |‘? >¥t “I wish you'd stop in at Mr, Slavins- ky's and toll \im that the man he sent jas in the china closet that citizens lies in the lack of knowledge of the mother. This is true in ho omneren rene Bie | ene 1S eR The glass he has put in is too thick all classes of mothers, and the “poor little rich girl” many a time in| and tt has a big flaw in tt.” said Mra. later life learns the lesson that mother didn’t teach. Aarts The fundamental principle of this now famous mother is sound, |. Vest th® vse? TU get the right Besides, she has the “proof of the pudding.” glans and fix it myself,” sald Mr, Jarr. “It all goes to prove what I say. The Mothers might well profit from this example, which is against | country Js full of botch workmen, who “physical punishment;” gives “reward for good behavior;” never CGR the world owen them livia, says “must” to a child, nor frightens it; does not allow it to say “1 ean't;” always answers the child’s questions; does not “tease” it, and Well, if it does they'll never be smart enough to collect i* When I hear seeks to make the home of the child “as attractive as possible.” {imagens me'mleks | Why don't they try Presumably the great popularity of going Aabing is due to the fact that rt it bas been found to be the best |for their pictures, means of doing nothing while seem- ys. to be doing something.—Albany | Give a fool money and he will deme | Place: lollini; over the bar and reading onstrate the Darwinian theory.—Bal- | the war news German newspaper, eee timore American, “Where's Gus?" asked Mr, Jarr. e 8 ments nearly always oe @ chill, Hits From “Sharp | We can never understand why vices should be promiscuously “hereditary, Some people never achieve success o it i te pareiee Suen sees Hed Netter] it Jarr. “This is an excellent location, 4 ieiafe Blade,” —Albasy Jouront Jour but be tnsujts bis good customers} 1 to do good work? A good man its never out of @ job.” ‘ou shouldn't say that,” said Mre. Jarre, “you have been out of employ- Wits. Peopio who draw on their tmagina. | ment yourself.” on generally have a poor background Deseret News, ° ° Neha cal Yquently aoc-| good and Gus is gone to pinochle Bcc weer ot, ‘he, tranegroseor 's Pilates GRC ee A eT ian eee Parety fs It lonesome. eee “Business would be good if Gus would attend to 1 snorted Mr, ' [ T GE Ne AU The vote t ite seal | } ( MONEY WE HAVE | | CAN ThuPle IT The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell hd CO Ae Nee hore Beemug and hires incompetent help.” Mr, Jarr sneered, drank his “morn | by The Preee Publishing Knocking His Bread and Butt INCE upon a time there was, @ man who had a grievance against the world, He went that ever got rich quickly by selling | world owed him something, but he always forgot that he was the col- this man had ao fairly good brain and considerabie 'y, but bis great complaint was somebody didn't give him ry 9 BS BBY of ee tt wy j@ trouble in securing @ = but he did not hold ite ba herefore, blamed the world in gen- eral and the “capital” class in par- day a kind friend ci and lent an ear to John Doe's pi He thought it a pity that a man lke ould be so unfortun: and, as a good friend often does, he inter- |eeded in his behalf and secured em- ployment for him with another f Doe went to work. bad been there a few days he got into the spint of his \ork, learned womething about it, and quainted with bad many chats with them, all these discussions it was p! evident that John Doe's grievance had permeated the atmosphere. the matter and that was the matter, Something was always wrong witb something and everything was not Not only did he air his critt- themselves crazily, feed themselves | 18 fellow laborers, and about the poor workingman's wrongs At Gus's saloon Mr. Jarr found the cn 8 | bartender, Eimer, ail alone in the am nineteen and bave an older aister who is very bash- MARAT ON ACE BETWEEN A HARE AND A COeThe i | | ' ; ' Mr. Jarr Finds the Whole Universe ables of Everyday Folks By Sophie Irene Loeb hurtin, man.” Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers. T is absurd for a girl to expect @ dofinite declaration from a man after a few woeks' acquaintance The fact that somo young men do profess their love at the end of such & brief period inerely shows their im- pulsiveness and Jack of wisdom. 1 believe it takes at least a year for any two persons to know each ther weil enough to know that they Often a longer period must lapse before love springs up in the hearts of both, based on sturdy friendship and acom- prehensive knowledge of each other's mind and character, has a much bet- lasting than does the ewift, sudden infatuation, nd man should take plenty of time to know their own minds, “H. J.” writes: open & (The New York (Evening World), clama of the workmen in his hom but also id tell what @ bad firm he was Ono day by chance the friend's friend who had hired him overheard some of his wallings. called him to task something like this: “Here's your pay envelope and you » but learn one lesson in the pass- ere is some: ng in the work that you do not think ts right ars tell it to your employer. He is hiring such men and not firing them. Any I the difference of wits I have ob- good business man wants HONEST CRITICISM from those who are in his business. Your besetting sin is} It is @ little mystery to know finding fault with instead of giving|them; to discern what every nature, the boost to a man'a business. : are knocking your bread and butt. and are ® LIABILITY instead of an|fFe We sow our land we should ASSET to the firm. You spread tho| Plough it. There are no fewer forms disease of discouragement among the of mind than of bodies among us, other men, and are a detriment to their efficiency, If you can’t be loyal yourself. mote our rts, on the perishing path. or employee ever succe way, and until you get that out of your system you are no good to any He facedn NT. BE FAITHFUL |°f S00d promise at fir TO YOUR FIRM FIRB YOURSELF |'® @ Wit-stand; they BEFORE YOU ARE FIRED, until m: eball I I think your mother {s treating you | Othere the But if you cannot persuade | position at her to change her mind I am afraid | tuning fall in which they writ qt you will have to endure the present |runs and slides, but only makes a| situation, so long as you are under | sound—women's poets they are called, | age and living at home. fo F water {s married. What or unfairly. jove with he! you cannot believe whi uM. U." writ attract as I do the other, Is Incompetent—Including Himself. ing’a morning” and departed. The subway guard roared the stops un- intelligibly, and when a woman en- tered and asked if it was a Brooklyn train the guard's only reply was to ask her why she didn’t read the “It's no wonder they stay where) they are,” remarked Mr. Jarr to @ man next to him. “Why couldn't he have told the woman it wasn't a Brooklyn train?” So he went over to the woman and told her. Whereat she gave him a suspicious look and replied, ‘Well, I'm only going to South Ferry, and if I want information I'll ask for it.” “Mr. Jarr," said the boss, beckon- ing to him as he came in, “you are jlate again. And I find you haven't | attended to those bills of lad It | you don't do your work better I'll get | somebody else to do it. A word to the wise is sufficient!" Quonconnnnmnennnnanennene Ho Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy. By Ben Jonson. served there are many notes and You every disposition will bear; for be. | The variety is incredible and there- fore we must search, Some men are “Instead of helping us you are|ft te make divines, some poets, some us and are a hindrance to|/#Wyer some physicia: ‘ing men t - rey to place ga|. Some Wits ure hot and flery, others employer 4 that } Bone to t to the plough and trucks, Ms cold and dull; o1 must have a bridle, that are forward will do every little thing easily, 1 mean that is hard + th Ath by and next them, which they will Oa hie aaw MrnselT evan? | utter unrotarded without any shame. other guise—at last the true one, learned this moral: IF YOU CA’ quickly, There are wits sixteen; they get no higher, You have others that labor only to ostentation and with the colors an work than in the matt ween, they a are that have no com- but a rhyming and as you have women's tall They write a vers “R, F." write: T am in love with a soft as cream, girl and have been calling on her for| In which there no torrent nor some time. Another young man bas scarce stream, been calling, but she says he is in| You may sound these wits and and Should i believe| the depths of them with your little finger. They are cream bow! or but You do not love the girl much if| puddle deep. she tells you,| There, are some that turn over all books and are equally searching in all "I should like to|papers, that write out of what they the attention of a certain| presently find or meet without choice, young man, His friend likes me very much, but | do not like hin go weil|they have discredited and impugned What shall I do? I advise you not to accept atten-|extolled the same in another. Suc! tions from one man when you like|are all the essayists—even thelr mas- another better, tep you may tak y which means it happens that what in one work they have before or after ter, Montat These never perforin but there nd still at, er more busy| urface of a and founda. | tions; for that is hid, the other is 48 Smooth, as The Evening World Daily Magazine. Tuesday. April 6. 1915 A beiplees wife clinging to © man's cos! (ale may be e burden, wae ove « UB Can Led to o dogs tall will A reeteurateur bas named bis favorite liqueur and guer Lor header he 10 te always Ube last bine that dows Liat oeturally it ie eweet end thrillin, Life ls « bal masque, to whieh Selfishuess usually comes disguised @@ Love.” and Love masquerades as everything from “Miatwoic Friendship” Near Flirtation. When you pin your faith to a man's devotion use & safety clutch A map « Op! to offer gold wedd like coupons with every & When @ woman has vainly tried aft she can alw. for another man, Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland en ee Pm Femme oe (Tee hee bet tome Hk ATULTING @ “@iritamer” le deliberstely placing your happiness o@ (he bumpy end of 6 see-nee ye takes a giri'e Kies ot ber own valuation, and change for the “The Piret Ki eae to leave you #1bhe@ % Ways of making 6 man proposer ‘8 succeed at the psycholJgical moment by “eiving vim up* It ts @ good thing, once in while, for a married woman to take a little vacation from home, just in order to get @ few Bowers and compliments and put a new kink in ber vanity. A now flirtation is the “chaser” which o the heartache after a heady love takes in order to deadew What le “Artertosolerosiat” HIS word “sclerosis” gives use our clue, It is a Greek word, ing “hard.” Artertoscie- rosis i@ one of the commonest ohronio decays or degeneration in the body, including @ gradual breaking down of | the tiny muscles in the walle of the arteries, with hardening and loss of —==By Dale OHAPTER XXVII. | HE days that followed were | | busy ones. 1 aold my office ! | fixtures and good will to Dr. Landon. He proved to be a very pleasant, capable fellow, | whom 1 did not hesitate to trust with | Dorothy's cat I made several calls with him, introducing him to those | of my patients that I had to leave in ‘his charge. In the country profes- sional etiquette is not so stringent ae | in the cities, and he seemed most ap- preciative. He also bought my runa- bout, paying me a good price for it. 1 had had it repaired since my uc- cident and it was nearly aa good as new, “1 shall have to do without @ car for a time,” 1 explajned to Jane, who J id asked: | SAVhy: are you so deprecating that fact to me? bit ae she per bas : very little pleas' oyiam atrata it will be some time before | can afford the upkeep of one in Chicago,” 1 continued, pretending tice Moron, ‘youll soon have one tf you imagine you need it!” Jane returned, “You know you never do thout |what you make Jauranlt believe is sgary,” she added, nett ri a question of making m: acif believe, as you infer, Jane, always « real need when 3 Duy 1 ve you extra’ tate cPteally Vory much excited over this move 1 had decided to make. It was an advance In my profession, or (aw AXcast 1 so considered it, at the | ‘samo time realizing that I wag leav- ing a certainty for an ungertainty. ‘As I had told Jane when we were firat married that “everything must give to my ambition,” I now told my- self that everything SHOULD. I | fully intended to be one of the great eurgeons of the country. And noth- ing else on my horizon counted—not then. afternoon in the middle of the weak an 1 was returning from Wood- ford, driving the runabout and in. tent on an operation I had just per. . To my surprise just as | SPeros ein a few feet of me the | chauffeur made a sharp cut across the ro: nd turned back the way he came, leaving a cloud of dust that ‘stop short to avoid a c | that point and the larger car effec- | tually prevented my passing. “T° am_ post itive there were two in the car,” I sald when | dinner. ‘e had our dinners served safely. nate contemners of all helpers and arts, such aa dare deride all diligence and seem to make at the terms when they understand not the things, think- ing in that way to get off wittily with their ignorance. eo are imitated often by such as are thelr peers in negligence, though they cannot be in nature, and they ut! all they can think with @ kind of violence and in- disposition . . unexamined without My Wife’s Husband Drummond = Coprright, 1916, by The Prem Publishing Co (The New York Bvening World), formed, I saw the Hemming limousine} Jane had maid moodby at the momentarily blinded me, I had been lision, as the road was narrow at {felling Jane and Dorothy of it at| posal ¢ whole books and authors and Mey But the wretchedest are the obsti- | ithe te ARLES tt) to Seige | Sno’ stncar a,” PAHO Pine or im her room so that she would ne@ fetiayoe i oping with somp “Maybe he was elo) one and didn’t want you to eee them, the invalid suggested. “Nonsense, Dot! Don't be eo aillyi™ Jane spoke arly, then the conversation, but I could not help ne ticing that she was distrait and acted unlike herself all through the dinner. She excused herself as the dessert was brought in, and a moment after- ward I heard her at the telephone, KX wondered who ahe was talking to and half expected to see her return wit @ message; but as she didn't I socom forgot the incident. I had offered to help about packing some of the heay~ fer pictures and things before I left, but was immensely relieved when Jane objected: “If we have to remain here a month or six weeks longer it is foolish to be- gin to tear up now. Olsen will do ali the packing when I am ready.” Olsen, ever since I had cured him, had constituted himaeif Jane's “mam Friday.” “I don't know what you will de without Olsen,” I laughed. “Neither do I," ahe returned. “He {a such a comfort.” “Yes, and we felt that I was waste ing time when I was working ove him. At least you did.” “Well, now I think it was the best investment you ever made, and & only wish we could take him with us.’ “Wait until I accomplish what I intend to do and we will send for him,” I told her, uo you need him,” earcastio- ¥. “Yes, when I need him,” I repliedy Jane's mother had written, saying that so long as we had Dorothy om our hands she would be delighted have me bring John to her and her care for him until we were sete tled. But Jane would not hear to It. and clung to the child with a pas- sionate tenderness that perplexed mi anne was a very healthy, normad id, On Friday I lett for Chicago. Dor< othy was as comfortable as possible and was getting along nicely. I attended to al’ the odds and ends my work and was anxious to be as the new doctor came after me the runabout. I think that his in~ for me in the ca I had running eo long made me feel the 1 pending change more keenly thi anything else. Jane, Dorothy, Mariha—Jane insisted on keeping her—and Joha were to come on as soon as Dorothy was able. In the mean time I was to use any leisure time at my dia- in house huntin; (To By Continued.) ‘The true artificer will not run away ¢ from nature as if he were afrald of her or depart from life and the like-, ness of truth, but speak to the capa. city of his hearers, Another age or juster men will acknowledge the vii . tues of his studies, his wisdom in dividing, subtlety in arguing, with what strength does inspire hig readers, with what eetness: he strokes them, in inveighing what sharpness, in Jost what urbanity he uses, how he doth reign in men's af+ fections, how invade and break