The evening world. Newspaper, May 15, 1915, Page 10

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The Evening World Daily Magazine. Saturday, May 15, ——-t— SEE en dr, Mere ti Bion. meTutisc, we By Maurice Ketten | What ¥very heen | Woman Thinks By Helen Rowland Pe Foered a Cuteery tien he : World for the Cottes ts ne she Cini 1 the Vee Vonage © (Me Now Vere tvewing We one aad AS TO THE NEW MENACE TO MATRIMONY. nal 6s OMEEAVE Hothed the Widow, ploking oe of (he Hecke. Vout Mi * wioves Crom the table, and thoughtfully ording an in svners Peet Hip in the fovetings ' ) have evlabliahed a new A BLUNDER. Quick al T ddvene.” exclaimed the Maohelor, baring hie eu® ' nine ben ow Ar t “ 1 newer (ue Widow calmly opened her pink ilk workbag and pres ' ' rip on the foreting i L kuprowe” whe sutbed, “there Wil be no morryine or siving in marrage i , “ aot woe inquired the Mache romero ber rosy @ngers mining . ties OF peed We have hod laundriea ‘ - b * bu torn he f one have ha . . 1 nent ith wll the ec h ite diseom ~ ; SHOR ; \ forts, for years, We have had eh nwo friends to They know 1 know ‘ sa [Set SE} Y #iVe He spiritual companionship, « with real he poking— ; ; rea : * nd men go right on marrying, now and 1 nation have been with Great Brita ate “ Yes,” retorted the Widew, with a one-cornered anuie, “Some of you io many Amero an minds lat distrust of British nn ’ marry ‘owein’ and ah and @ome of you never marry of all, But thle mending shop’ t fovea, Your cup supplied the Inet | home-comforts is fi efel) want in the way of domeatio and brimming over Why, you For £ ) ! WOMEN € Why m NOT ’ F qT * mpt up and p even have phonographs to sing to you in the evenings, and alarm clocks te 1 1 ¢ World ea nti t t wake you up in the mornings, and electric spotiiahts to find your collar alii. ' buttons wit British men-of-» virtually blockading the P York Orr | \ Of late we have more than once had to come to the re f Amer | {The Gentie Art of Home-Do a) 2 RRA ARRARAAADPARAALPPPODOLS | mee vemeen 4 as British a “ 1 we have nobody to blame for making us dir . ee or to hide our keys, or borrow our combs, or misplace our cravate, tually have fore as determined a at we now and relieve the general peaceful monotony of inate life.” sighed the Bachelor address to Germany significantly No man ever married just for the comforts of home, any- Why didn’t the Prussian war-makera see this and wait? How reed the Widow, making @ poss with her needie, “apparently could they think that outraging American ryghts would help them? not! Hecause the moment a man acquires a home, his whol hier a ‘ , m t r " \ to be concentrated on the thought of what excuse he can make for ataying German Li ite upon this country could never in a thousand is VEILS For away from or ting away from it in the evenings, The moment he @e- induce vs to demand a modification of Great Betarn’s b hade to MEN ui 1 Wife to talk t i GREAT FoR In trying to think up ways to heep her quiets and the moment he haa hom Mo: C cooking every might, he ns to long for caviire and broiled lobster, and SQUITOES pate de fols eras, and terrapin, But, what DO they marry for?” she added, J ton wondered,” 1. what do women marry fort” rejo “The mom » woman sto sigh at having to ‘ finunelil independence; and the m nafter dinner, all his ingenutty se ms to be spe the end that Germany might strengthen her own Teutonic thoroughness has overte know us. Why do Germans in America Jet the Patherland labor If. Germany doesn't ed the Bachelor, cheerfully as aomet to support her, ro every penny,’ and to yearn for she has a husband to take up her Jatt n, She complains that she has no to give any attention to her- \welf, Why, in these days, when [t's no longer a disgrace to be single, and women can go about alone to restaurants and theatres, and earn a live | ine ina hundred casier ways than by cooking and housecleaning and cater- ing ty a man"— should see that under delusions as to our national character? ‘I she is better informed ——__—_-+4e —_—-- | THE POTENCY OF WORDS. {4 AUTIOUS,” “restrained,” “diplomatic,” “temperate,” “moderate,” “friendly,” “tactful,” “correct,” “deferentia nate in comments on the President's note to Germany. Better it should impress the country that way. Words that pasa between governments are potent beyond prediction. ‘The man who voices the feeling of a nation stakes the honor, peace and happiness of millions on his mastery of meanings. “Strict accountability,” for example, or “any word or any ac’ Tost words—but once written, once seen by those for whom and by those to whom they are said, no one can erase them, no one can modify them, no one can even shade their meaning without risk of betraying a nation’s honor. The President’s note has a quality which is more effective than! force alone! Any one of a thousand Americans might have clearly | siated this country's case and urged its demands. But how many| would have outlined, with masterful tact, a way for Germany to ac- quiesce? Strength and diplomacy are still a powerful partnersiip. | careful,” “deliberate,” “courteous,” “urbane “And when, even at sixty. Broke in the Widow, “a woman can hav ‘beans, and a man ean b | “And when ‘loneliness’ | you have te ve ‘girls’ no longer a bugaboo, but a luxury, for which pay in cold cash," finished the Bachelor, “well, there doesn't seem naterial reason for marrying, does there? Who ever married for a material reason!" laughed the Widow “The reasons for which people marry are always immaterial— Auch as the tit of a girl's nose, or the way in which a man smiles, or the shape of his shoulders, or the curl ack of her neck, or because they were looking at the moon, or becanse their families opposed them”— “Or just for a lark ot an adventure,” suggested the Bachelor. “Or for an experiment, or for a CHANGE!” finished tue Widow. “Thats what moat people marry for—ta change’ of troubles and worries. Ite Whe | transferring an umbrella or a parcel from one hand to the other. For tn- jAtance, by getting married, a woman gets rid of the burden of checking her | trunks, and takes instead the burden of looking after a man's laundry”—— | “And the man,” ventured the Rachelor, “gets rid of the burden of keep- ing track of his shirts and collars, and takes instead the burden of paying — r his wife's hats and buttoning her frocks up the back"—— Mrs. Jarr Can’t Spend Money Twice; | The Hard Times Are to Blame for That ‘A ‘1 ters $A Stock of Ready-Made Worri FRA hat is true,” sald Mrs. Kittingly,| tempted to take it. It may not be And the man,” added the Bachelor, “stops worrying about the fact that who knew nothing at all about the! very good, but it would do nicely to le is drinking too many highballs, and getting fat, and ought to settle down, predomi- TRANSPARENT BRIM HATS) For MEN 2 FURS For Women WHY NoT FoR NEN , Ne D the woman ceases to worry about where the rent is to come from nd begins worrying about whether the bacon will be just right for The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Sei neencensan tb aiemanenmiaas matter. wear in the countre with a plain and begins worrying about whether or not he can meet the weekly bills.” Coporight, 1915, by The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World “There's a nice shirtwaist for $8.98!" | skirt, i ® “In short.” finished the Widow, giving a last stab at the giove, and ' THE MONEY BEHIND CRIME. ‘ HY, who would have) you could buy ready-made dresses| said Mra. Jarr excitedly. “Only that} “I didn’t intend to pay more than! SAPPInE off her thread, “marriage js like ones summer vacation, Just @ f for" eet y more ‘emporary rellet—a nice Ii ought of meeting you | for T must get dresses for Emma I'd be|$% or $4 for a framed picture,” said ‘And most of us need the change.” sighed the Bachelor, “to keep us said Mra, Jarre HE round-up of gangsters, gunmen and crime patrons which her “and really I need from getting grouchy and set in our ways, and tired of life and of ourselves, Y 4 Son ii in & surprised tone as PODPOPOP OPEL LPLIPLLPPLOOD L&D | 8OMO OY day : f ‘ dt body who takes up all r worry: we e he New York police has one si; fe g some every-day shirtwaists, too. It When you are married to somebody who takes up all your worrying-power, stands to the credit of the L gniti he came face to face Fables of Eve da Folk: seems @ shamo to wear good ones! You have none to waste on self-introspection, Like Socrates, every man cant aspect, eee with Mrs, Kittingly at the bargain ry y S around the should marry for self-disciplin house, for when I send ——— | Mrs. Kittingly It is only occasionally that we are reminded how much money Dace titaes wares se Bid pair hi H —== By Sophie Irene Loeb == | my fine lace ones to the laundry they |... 1umtent ASE aE Reeuaes a8 ca one eae agen he ee: is available in this city to instigate, reward and defend crime. Al-| children to clothe the money has to alWays come back positively ruined. nally.” Coperight, 1916, by The Prem Publishing Co. (The New York Even 4 ort), “It must be nice to be able to buy 4 “ . 1 “ @ Jon ve ‘Word! .” sighed the Rachelor, “And once we're married, it's a case of "We ready tr des unions and individuals: mentioned in. “Dopey Benny's O Becaient save no children ta no The Spirit of Revenge. herself more lovely, since she was out |')/ngs for one's self," sighed Mrs. | phere because we're here!’ as the song goes—and nobody cares but the ‘mend- amazing confessions have raised $125,000 to defend persons involved Fauna hati Tien untvoailan amen cn INCE upon a time there was a| 10ing ap ‘orid’s work—she | Jarr, “You are a fortunate woman, | ing shop! in hia story. buy things for other people, my young woman, She Wes Siand made ant pee ne | ay dear: I simply can't buy even a | 6 -————— allowances, and grew to| cheap shir Dopey Benny” and others like him contracted to kill people, | dear” said Mrs, Kittingly feelingly. Npecpsnade pean oe ose UAL Ema nme tmier states M Wife’s Husb d yand more, Ina word, it 8 cut off their ears or destroy their property for fees that had become |." Never seem able to get anything By Dale Drummond had many admirers, She was Led 1s the real thing—love. little Emma some summer dre: 4 on all sides, Every-| Now the beautiful young woman| “I have half a mind not to buy the! 2 for myself." courte couldn't possibly bear to have a rival, | pr oo eee standardized. ‘Thoirs was a profession, But there can be no pro-| “im just the samo way," said Mrs.| Body told her how attractive ahd | especially a succensful one s [Peer Se Mie AMEN: OW BN f Als A lovely she was, and she grow to Hke| Tchad never happened before, “And{*Hould [go without things to buy fession without clicnts of means end some position who regularly |Jarr. “I'm always thinking of the) eee very much, She was very/auch a plain person, too,” she pon-|Mesents for people who never remem- , othera first, and then my money in| 8 : dered in her envious thoughts, It was | i ° ' require the services of its members, wone and 1 have nothing for myeelt.” | Wonderful in her own eyes. | ver I am alive unless they want] % . : Just intolerable to hes. The spirit of | ° } We are beginning to find out about these clients, We need to} “1 nave to met a wedding presont| Sho ruled everything within sight. | Tovenge runkled. and sho wanted. to{S2mething? If you will get one of know more. Men who can and do pay others to commit crime are | for @ second cousin,” explained Mr aud thought she could have anything | wrest him away from her. She chose |'08e shirtwaists UN not buy the pres- : 1d because of her wonder-| Various unkind ways to do it. She lent i a ‘ Rania Kittingly, “I don't know what to get, |! the wor more dangerous to the community than their hirelings, For itis the} jut qiink rit get a See anea patrons who extend the business, Ly by The trove Wublis (9, (Phe New York Evening World), CHAPTER XLII. ways had when I particularly wamt- y,] ed anything»-to have one, T had been a frightful day.) “y+ would soon be time for Jame te ‘The rain had come down 1M! jeave for the lake. I would walt until torrents for hours, and as I) after she had gone, then take the time had had several calle to| to te out several cars before I decided | make—all widely separated |)" 0 h* rurpriae (0 her eee hod 1 was completely soaked through. | turned in the fal well as having tbo n [finally returned to the office, Use of it through the hot weather. Tt was quite possible that I should not be able to E said cutting things about the girl to] sw, atievan att ful beauty. him. Sho harped about the poverty elt, that’s awful sweet of you, & wale of framed pictures here to-| Along came # man who seemed very }of the girl's family, and how “com- |*#/ Mrs, Jarr, “And, come to think! i i h f h ay, and Tam going to seo if 1 can{sttractive to her. He was a little |inon” she was, and how she really!¢f it, I can let down the tucks of| It promises well for the city that the police are now after the eat something cheap but showy; | More handsome than the others, a wore L 4 a el a &e. ae mma's last summer dresses.” z " ap chee | rd tn ie » bel manly man, = Si a man behind the criminal, scmething in a big gilt frame, My {little richer, distinguished among men. | ronded the ‘git! ax best he could, for| S° both ladies ordered shirtwaists second cousin lives in a small town, | 804 altogether a most desirable patt-|he did not understand the reason [Seot home, C, O, D, Then, after get- . a n Ga) ahearcoll ince aus hatter? "Iner in the social game. for the attack. He did not know the|t ng an ice cream soda, they parted.| © Mesend Jaue Hits From Sharp Wits eyo are just ike me,” aaid Mra] OF course, like all the other wan ee ee aan retro her tite |. Catch that selfish thing ever buy-| much fe my Borpoes liven (OR balteee dn: mitiheetine! he beheld her, he marvelled at heritje machinations, she stooped to |!& anything for somebody else!" was there, * = ful and : ai r 9 Nes.—-Phitad ' lovelines q homage to it, He | write “ ‘ alo ying: intention. 1 did not realize—in fact I Advice is cheap because there ts) again, but 4 te Hes Philadelphia In- | Ah aan Joveliness and paid write an anonymous letter to the | Mrs, Jarr's mental comment, say sine so little temand for it.—Toledy Blade, | quire! bie presenta, 1 hate to buy cultivated her acquaintance and they Iman about the girl, She anid things | “Little Emma Jarr certainly needs| “I came in to see if 1 could find a Jane, would feel that T nea eheactnat eee «2 « 5 becam end i ‘against her, her character—things she . ‘ i ring paper. In some way it dis- 14 4 planned to ‘A mean dog can't biame his faulta| It tam’t possible to judge the speed "So do 1" sahd Mew. Kittingty. |, 48 Usual, the girl thought she “had” told the man he ought to kno Fe ene [new clothes," thought Mrs, Kittingly,| morning pan re aneniar wet the machine when Miss on human nature.—Toledo Binde, ofa motoreyele by the noise it makes. | “What are sou looking for” him, and did everything to cultivate/man read to the end and marvelled | “Ut her mother thinks only of her-| appeared before T had s Dor that ertne exclusive use of 8 e@ ~Toledo Blade pening fof his admiration of her. that any one could be so ‘el; “ao nelet!? “Did you find it?’ J asked, taking Perhaps Jane might have ; 80 cruel, so. self! liked " You have to make some men talk, c* @ T have to wet some summer dresses; One day in the course of events, the |“common,” so vulisae cout a voive in the matter of = Sereecmaes — oo ee | Off MY W | So, but never mind, it really said Mra. tare {Man met another irl She was not] Ry a. strange colt arr) so beautiful nor had sh Le welf-mtart Ifa woman happens to hay but most women @ good for my little si | tenes he threw many ad- the letter in the same w lectin the car. As T have said is a true story, and Tam nat Cs - ot ppeal. sband sa ore or ‘Really, it doesn't: pi » niske ; c cu 0 ” nine Memphis Commercial Appea ustand phe wets all the credit fF At. “Really, it doesn't pay to make chtl-[Mirerm, bMe there was beauty in her | wherein. lay a note the mate cE ful but who had w bedutiful soul) wakes no difference,” moving toward | to excuse myself for my negligence. if it is true that the world owes os dren's clothes any more. By the) soul, which was apparent in her man-|had sent him the previous day. His leured the sight te protect here phe | the door of io, Not Wonder that our segregation y na living it will never get| It is never necessary for a person | time yeu buy the material and p her and her attitude toward things, wii noted the similarity the |“beautiful” girl learned this moral: ‘Hadn't you be change your] Or the sexes after marriage appears arene to go into training tn order to make |a woman by the day to mak The man Was drawp to thix young | handwriting, He knew the writer of | levenge Gost. tines acts ties . orth, before | tanks to a foreigner. ‘The American Mae. e 8 @ huisance of himweif—Pittaburgn | ay to make them | woman, Aa it happened, she did not | both, “He aiso reallaed how much he {rubber ball, which rebounds and hits | thes, Doctor Butterworth, Nateke | man's life, etther business or pro an will carry another woman's | Sun, ae ittsburgh | up spent more than what |have time to cultivate him or to make loved the girl who was not so beaus ithe avener : Mts vou see any patients?” Miss Reese wa 1, 9 spent in activities in whic sabdine for six blocks and never {a sss GESTS a nai secyan sue pp eauilapneaaetlic. = asked, “I'm afraid you will take culd; | his wife has neither part nor interea i is not allowed, nor expected t ny . o ‘0 hi vory wet haan The only thing we have in commen s d hesitated as she heard) our children—if we are #0 fortumete and now added: | as to have children, quito right as|, So as do other Americans, Jane lived one life, hers!” 1 liv mine!” But as to our lite tage et grumble, if ahe is good looking: but] The man wh you Just let his wife ask him to hold her | telitgence usually ox Bete Se Tete ey stat el| eutamn este Bea || Did You Know You Are Worth Just $1,965? an patience immediately,—Macon News, oe Miss Reese's voice eo. A bluff Is usually adinitted to be one ap py * “Miss Reese . only whe is 0 | e Latest Bulietin on, yours if the nation’s total wealth wero] ings, other structures, and public) hands of indivi¢ d cot fr ’ ol t ‘Truth crushed to earth will ri nmiy when it fai Albany Journal in sivided pventy among the pation’alWorke owned by the Pp * individuals and commercial) ygual. You WILL take cold, It was aa = deral, State | organizations--that exclusive of er ti se life together “National Wealth’) jot popuation, + and local governments, with the land | the noitaxabie property owned. by| Most thoughtful of her to SUBKeSt) thiy time the less sald the better, % a r Bae GUNeH Bed stand, together with | governmental, educational, charitable, changing,” then left the room, loved her, She, I think. stitt Proves That Is the Ave) Sperng ie pen at bulletin of} auch perty ‘of educational, natitutlons ia given for| 1 much annoyed by the inci-| Me.’ But we had no confid reek f ) Letters From the People wealth 18] as is exempt from taxation, mmeree, at di » journe erage Per Capita Sum Wiminon, our nation charitabl religious institutions Next in order como! dent; just why | couldn't easily have| RO litte journeys into each others f ind and soul, knew officially e r 187, 739,000,000, with $3,345; North Dakota, | explained had no way of knowing | Other spiratione | Owned by Everyone. When auinated ay population | New York Is the Richest State, Californi: 118 Nenraskal| Tee nan Healtacod t the door, che what we te ark new of tay we ‘A Safety 9 ) Prussian lieutenants and eaptu figures, makes the aforesaid $ The total wealth of N jotontana, 743; Colorado, intending to ask me to come into the gon, OOH BROW OF my athe To the FAitor of The Brening World submarine crows, GRAHAM RYLE —— capita state, white Tiinsie. and anne pad ne a cme ef a Me hen he German ariion were tn pope and Mlinois, $2,5 In no other vadin m0, | "To the jiton eo ven the Frenck took to blowing up Gers a : ") ty th . keeper whi man troop trains, ae TE asks how to keep ants out of the re- or ehild, that is your fortune i Occasionally, as the t esented the fact that Mixs Reese qq, . 6 time was the feure as high had spoken first; alao the fact that @oubts came. to me: a fe three States—Ulinois, California and iw puld attention to my physical Perhaps in some way T wag | 4 State, while Hlinois and Pean- + With $15,484,000,000 and. $1 8,000,000 respectively, are close rivals: for second piace, Other States which Ante. | A Boom All Along the Line | In less than two-thirds of a cent N) from 1850 to 1912 th ation, exeludin, OU are worth just exactly $1 Whether you are man, wom: iowa~for which the total valuations, yeed that f did not unde; 1 80 expressed my ir | wore high also showed bigh por cap tle " "7 rank A total weal pita dno eit that L could afford © “janes Brirate’ coon “tie locomotives of fikerator, Se. L suRKeRL placing tin) Perhaps you can't got hold of iC at estate. increased fron Wich Guba (osaeoe enti | figures, 1 Rae DOT eee ant arthe un gane Ubexan, ‘ Svery train. If in the present war lide filled with kerosene under the feet a minute's notice to aquander on vary OY Sead per tanita, the, percentages (Ns 88,000,000 me Other Countries’ Wealth fact that my tances were in a flour |"ery Tikely.” she lm PB BUMNST OF UORIAD Bre Des ere | ieavall sexe ee arenes costumes or candy: but it's there. Of increase being 2368 for the total | st | ‘Phe latest published estimates of | ishing condition. But as spring Ad-lis because you don't take tie 2 1 provided with board and lodging ton at have been greatly treubleg | Perhaps, also, your fortune is larger and 496 for the por capita amounts, YN) jthe wealth of foreign countries show | Yaneed [ determined to have one if it! try Bil allied end. peutral passenger |Site | have been stanly troubled | oy neat door neighbor's is) Mother words, the wealth of the na- 209. 8ithy Linnes: $108, 280,000,000 for the British Empire) ¥ re possible, 1 had many cases >. You are different," T returned; 4 steamers they need endure no greater) with them and have found this the Cae ee eee eae vag, Hon as a whole Is nearly twenty-five 04000; Mich igen, $5,127.00 in 1003,"of Which amount $72,497,00y,009 | Were L needed Miss Reese's services, “you are colder and more unepaeey i baréshipg than an occasional attac! Hert é ave not been smaller t Just NaC) mes as Kreat as it was in 1850, with diana, & » is was credited to the United Kingdom, | and it was awkward, going on the) thetic.” ympe. r of seasickness, and unless their fel-) bothered with them since using it 1 amount. that of t individual is about sis credited with 000,000,000. The estimate for the United States! street cars carrying instruments and) "Constant association wit low countrymen chose to murder | still aprinkle it around from time to " It not in the | tines a grea When the comparisons are applied | in'1904 was $107,104,000,000, The wealth | the other things often necessary. | sympathetic people 1s bound iy them the present paral a), of, blood pe, op nent ing ae ie te Spl ne. " The exempt real estate, which was Ou 4 Der Capit basis, however, a very of Germany in 1908 was estimated at) Then, too, all the surgeons I met or b would receive a . ry care! Oo avol res from the plural. In other ‘estimated at $12,314.000,000, or $129 different showing is made. The high- | $77,864,000,000, Comparable estimates associated with bad cars, and I it particularly benefit cultured kerosene, oaie se O. R. words. thai is the sum that would be ver capita. in 1912. includes the build- est per capita Agure for wealth in the are wes mmailable for other nations, thought it good business policy—as I t one, I don't suppose I ay [Sue laughed cynically, “™ °**™ Li (To Be Continued.) P| . ne ss neeneemmnrarramermnenererencramanen clit

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