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| <n tt A TELL LT TO IO ELE EE TLE a A SS Ln AT a rae fone ee Spore: | a ~ ~ sehsi POTARLIEN MD WY JOR POLITE Pwrlioned betty Hacent fer ' eCoomenr oe te The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, May 20, 1915 ‘World for the Coited mates “AN Coeptries to thet & be ana wotsl ome Powys: OS “VOLUME os = iz (aes NO. 10a THE GREAT NORTH WOODS. HE Constitutional Convention at Albany, it is expected, aeked tom of the great north woods by ite predecessor he precautions taken to inea @ intes lumbermen look with greedy eyes upon the Northern New York fat preserves of the Stat show that ripe ¢ form of forest cultivation such as prevails in Gerinany, with libers opportunities for private gain on the aide Tt was not the purpose of the State at the tine to artificial attomp: at forestry. The purpore was to provide a primeval forest in the Adirondack regions wh Nature might go her woy totally unchecked; where the wild birds and animals might have safe refuge and where the lakes and streams could have that conservation which only complete alsence from interference hy man can insure This purpose should remain unchanged. Lat the State forest alone There is plenty of waste land for cultivation where the lumbermen can exercise their talent, plenty of barren territory that might well he covered with profitable timber. This is not part of the scheme of the invaders, They want some thing ready at hand to be slaughtered and sold. ‘That the private in dividuals in the lumber business should preserve and conserve never, eeems to occur to them and will bring forward much argument to should be removed and that we ould have a inany ——___— ‘There seems to be a good deal of Jerome in Mr. Winston Spon cor Churchill > GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP IN JAPAN LEADERS for Government ownership of public utilities need not look for testimonials from Japan, According to the Japan Weekly Chronicle the Japanese are thoroughly disgusted with the way the Government runs the tele phone service—despite the whole country’s recognition that “among adjuncts of modern civilization which Japan has imported from the West nothing has been a greater boon and benefit to the public than the telephone.” The Government authorities will permit no competition, yet they keep the service strayzgling along years behind the demand. Applica-| tions for telephones made in 1906 are only now being attended to, | Towns of a thousand population get telephones as soon as cities whe the need is a hundred times greater. Telephones are bought and sold | “Tike pieces of furniture.” Brokers take advantage of administrative | ewamolence to trade in instruments to their own profit. As the Chronicle observes: The tardy er in which the telephone has been extended Is the most eloquent testimony of the leisurely way in which some Government enterprixes are conducted. A private company which G4 business im this way would soon be bankrupt. This is the best the Japanese public can get ont of a highly cen- tralized government supposed to be working of late years under high Pressure of efficiency. What would happen under a system of dis- tributed responsibility complicated by oscillations of party and power such as we have in this country? + We thought {t was about time some editor be san to run the war for England. Lord Northcliffe is at the bat for the first luning! PLENTY OF FRUIT. word of the Hon, John Howard Hale of | Glastonbury ing of American Peach Growe He| bases his prophecy on 50,000 trees ready to bear fruit this year and all in “prolifically promising condition.” , « IGGEST peach crop we ever had” is the glad news from Con-| 2° when she could come bi necticut, on th Enough strawberries to give every man, woman and child in this|about it, The gt elty a saucerful, 160 carloads, 1,100,000 quarts, arrived here Mon- day from Maryland, Delaware, Virginia and North Carolina, If straw- berries are not cheap this week some why. New Jersey announces that she is ready with ler strawberry crop an unusually big one. The berries will begin to come in before those trom further South are exhausted. Strawberries and peaches are best of all fruits—and native. The nearer the market they grow the bet us showy table fruits for the winter, So does the South. But N vdy onght to find out the reason in the luscious produce of gardens and orehards act over a hundred miles or so from the city ought to be cheap. Hits From Sharp Wits Oh, yea, every woman is economi- | | | r they taste, California sends | ew | yc Yorkers never enjoy fruit so much as when they can set their teeth | Vor the next few months this pleasure| and 1 never could drink English |, Questions as to the recreations of covering from the criminal class, check on he wrong end. Columbia} pia n Mra, Rangle stopped In to ex- daily grind, the datly struggle to Love is the unfailing guide on the | with that autocrat, Only a Dream! “ «uttfthn. & By Maurice Ketten|, Reflections of A Bachelor Girl HAT FORMER CONGREGS Hayy BL ORL AMG HE Says WOREH DRIN® Nowe THAN) | BARGAINS | i | peiics y peer eatt, fe Cera 8 oy The Pao Peeking Un (The New Vert Reming eet —— ( Go % S.erP OTHING spotlt e man's memory ihe « babit of promising things to ~ \¢ = Town You MAW a foman i" 1 READ ENouae . -_ \' fo \ - : No dearte, men dont deliberately “go into matrimony,” they etagiy » 1 shen they are off thelr guard of have lost control of tier steering ear The “dangerous eee of man te that at which he hae lost hie @ret ° eothislaen for home cooking and got yet reached bie relish for pepeta tablets and an afer dinner nap, Bul no wife need be discoursges; A i laste only about twenty years The sweetest tee, Ike the biegest feb, in always thet for which @ ' toan fought hardest and just missed - — — When ao | my MisTaKe! ) y has made up bis mind to “reform.” and ts expecting te whole world to come around and pat bim on the back and pay him ta e@- | vance for being good and moral, it fs always @ shock to bim to discover that there are still back payments due for the time when he wasn't goed and moral | ov ot WIFEY, You wave) WHO NE )) 1) BEEN BenKING NEVER | « eee Pam ah | a nae agemeeenicee? | APoLoaize kts ISS S&F ? 4 Z 4 / Home The tenderness and solicitude with which @ man treats hie horse or caters to the whim of his automobile has tempted many @ girl to marry fo the hope that she would receive the same sort of devotion. a) im = f You 4] It might be a good Idea for every wife to tle a string around her hes { ., “ band’s florer before he goes down to the office these alluring spring daye (/ y) € P just to order to remind him that be ts married, | 1 a? _ ( Time fs the oculist that cures love's blindness; marriage the eurgienl | operation (hat removes It almost instantaneously A tow of eternal love on paper ts worth two on the spring moon. Things You Should fnow ! WAIKE UP] JOHN You ARE DREAMING! ‘SHAME ON You! You HAVE BEEN, _ DRINKING How We Grow. taken in the {the body wast nd etrength le lost. throwing off-called construc-| ‘fo keep a bi oe, exercise te re- tive and destructive, When the two} quired not merely fee a the oe, nalansed nh moving, but activity o ‘or- fare equally balanced health 18 (be oP ney ae: ee ie ise ‘ni na result: nd sunshine,food and drink, exercise, } | f a health suffer CURING growth two forces are, 8° Rrow fat--an Ne hod D cocoa busy ebullding up and|,, 88 00 i1ttle food Ie take tn If we take tn ao many pounds of} ;ext and recreation. i food and drink and air dally, we| If we could look within the bedy should throw off through the various | We should see the blood cells car the necessary oxygen to all parts; } channels so much waste. we should see the muscle celle storing { Every pair of lungs requires, every | up this oxygen against a day of need. hour, a hogshead of pure air, and) he gland cells we should see sub- | vitintes the saine quantity. We re-|tracting from the passing blood, ele- quire between five and six pounds of|menta needed in their work, end we (Ca and drinks We. throw. off| should see the brain celle (still more through the lungs se wonderful) developing @ force which vf carbonic acid a minuce, = ae some day subdue or electrify a through the skin one or two pounds | nation. daiignand any extra exertion Joubles| All these organs bear testimony to this amount. the great fact that only through ae When too much food and drink tal tivity ie growth and health. My Wife’s Husband By Dale Drummond The Jarr Family Irs. Jarr Finds Herself Up Against | One of Those Days That Nobody Wants Se ET WEF Se es Tig . | Cayerighit, 1019, by The Brew Pubitshing Oo, (The New York Drentng World), : me!" Rut she couldn't figure out how to) ‘HAPTER XLIV, dispensable to me I would net try te By Roy L. McCardsil “E awear I wasn't sneering at you,"| blame breaking the vase on him. PHLPTS pout al force her upon Jane, sald the amazed Mr. Jarre. “But it] == SS SSS ANE had been gone about A) About this time something bape : | | | week when I decided that I! pened that put Jane, and aleo Mise Coprright, 1915, by The Pree Vubltshing Oo, (The New York Evening World), Sverriiing Hak Bons Wenne with ye Hi | would be able to afford an Reese—in all but her professional VERYTHING had gone wrong! “Oh, don't stand there asking if] why blame It on me?” | Wit, Wisdom cutomobile, So 1 tried out /Ctpicity out of my mind. with Mrs, Jarr this day./ anything's wrong!" snapped Mrs. Jarr.| “Becaus couldn't whip iile " satura. the time! received a letter from the mast | | The little boy had fallen| “Everything's wrong. Wille fell down| When he inight have been killed, and and Philosophy oa a, tak tener inj emous, surmeon in Chicago, down and cut tis head.| the staire and nearly killed himself,| because one can't talk to other people | bn nnnnnwrannnnnnnnnnn! oe Fe a yeuly morn operation he Was to perform, and Gertrade had given nv Gertrude has gone out and 1 don’t] like ono would like to, and”— | MIRTH; by Julius Hare. Nidal ed upon Miss Reese “kina iy assistance, T was #0 fat ‘hat she had to go to New Jersey to] know when she'll be back, Mrs. Rangie| “And, then, Um only your hus- HERE is a large class of peovle |!" Fa auaiw SOBA TS , xo honored by the request, that a . fan" 3 : = * paid Mr, Jarre, i ‘ % to accompany me. 1 finally ¢ vuld think of nothing else, see a sister who was ill, and didn't] pretends to be a friend and yet r band,” eas who deem the business of life far » t "Wy ” fe " age | about of a very popular make, but Will you reauire my services?’ k--It| fuses to do me a Iittle favor, and—] “Toat's the answer,” said Mrs. Jorr,| too weighty and momentous to) Unt spaive than I bad in-| Miss Reese asked when I told her of 4 all depended on how tl hey sister |and*-here Mrs, Jarre commenced to} kissing him, “It's such a cormfort to! ye made light of, who would leave mer- | iitde more expensive ithe honor done mi wa ” i ese Was sub—"you come home and sneer at| have some one | can scold.’ Miss Heese riment to children and laughter to tdiots| tended buying, elias a : ore —-~--—————— | and who hold that a joke would be ag| partly to biume for this extravagans afraid rather 2 much out of place on iheir lips a# on | as b bad told ner of tny ussite to aur: | tor has a read ' had called on her way back from the n t i a % § gravestone oF in @ ledger, Wit and| prigo dane on hor ruin | s4/Mtondey came and the operation rata nie sweerron | Love Taat Always Lives ta wisdom being sisters, not only are! inis car, as, ed wo all the other was a great, @ wonderful #1 r had sent Mrs, “No, L think not,” I Mrs, Rangle had promised to bring Mrs, Jarr some dress patterns, ut are English br disliked extreme she did like and of which kind the: Was not one bit left In the house. She had broken 4 Vorite vase while! t a at |mreat man's who had performed the instead of the kind Copwright, 1015, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York kveuing World), they shudder at such a union as in-| the other cara of app know, operation, I bought sever \ ovr y fame cost. A woman, you | 5 ‘al copie & irk can be |cestuous, So to keep clear of temps | SAC Cosh. Nee geal of the and sent them to different people, om in newspapers and maga- ‘aught through BS i dan GE Aten tation and to preserve their taith fie Uf a var,’ Miss Reese sald to) of course, to Jane, tw love, oven wc it be favored with un- are detrimental tothe (aia) herolam or Intricate pl plots, 3 dusting, In short, Mra, Jarr had had acter of women was The one thing is to promote only | the younger out of doors, and If they | Price. «a wretehed day, voiced by Mra, Dave Hennen Morris the reading of love stories that are) see or hear of anybody taking ber in right, that Jane would like @ good hall expect you to assist me ting the child quieted she dia-|°?'"). National Board of the Young wholesome, To Inatil love in the | they are positive be cal KhoWw Motbing |{osking car, 1 purchased the one she Whenever you can, Butterworth, cussed the going away of the girl \ . ‘Association in a Deart should be one of the great los- | or (ue eider. They would uot be will- Women’s Christian Associa J sons in everyday teaching. It is the ing for tie world. Now to eacape | So¥oN Nh sue picked out with black. | too excited to be natural. speech before that pody & few da¥® strong rock upon which humanity has | poing so is not very difficult for those |f"think 1 was almost as proud as I Jane wrote me, ot menting me “Of course you must go, Gertrude. | ., lived, moved and had its being. Lt is ‘ : it pen 1 took | Upon the case, and sald abe ye M : whom Nature bas so favored that would be whea 00k | ou mustn't delay a minute, Pd never | 8? ish Mre, Morris could have bven the alpha and omega of existence, It | imagined Jane forgive myself if anything happened with me last week as | made the, makes character instead of mar- he rounds with # nurse into the homes ring it. of tubercular families, | Ask any warden of any prison, He In several of these homes | found will tell you that the man or woman » bread winners of the famiy to be who learns to love, even if It is only ng Women not out of their teen® from a book, ig on the road to ree ie opinion that love themes The greatest Ul ; e| As we parte ere: where they have plighted it they tura| ime wien 1 hesitated because of the) As, we parted amer the op Tena t she was undoubtedly | cordially, and remarked: ri “L and reeked "rt was a stylish looking |! had mumbled some sort of @ reply, wit with them is alway® al gery or in it as the owner by tho time she returned I would be Delow it. Oras to their wiadom elnce | ™Y,Orst ride In tt nation to sur: | so,famous 1 wouldn't speak to her, Uiey are careful never to overfeed | prisg Jane, 1 said nothing in my jet: his bit of pleanantry rather pleased her she jogs leisurely along the curn-|Pirs® o¢ my new purchase. IT had me. as Jane was not Inclined that way pike road with lank and meagre car. |'F8 Of My oe TEST had thine, and 1 thought T detected a better cass, displaying all her bones and| TA") baa answered promptly, her feeling toward me than she had shown ro gevling out of her OWD dust.| vtrerg telling me that the place of late. I answered her letter, t © feels no inclination to be frisk agreed with all of them and that) her that I should be up to the lake on ad her rider to run behind a r y month after Jane | lw! phone. “Don't scold the young man, tine, imany of thein love stories, Love {a the only traveller that keepa| 8.1 NO her Te ag people wed haga, Wary DURY me atte aad |tired nnd very much" in need Of m He won't do tt again, And mistakes) These young women have so inuch pace with Father Time. teine ottenee if eny. one. comes near | ett . aot reraly: know | change, and T looked forward to my ee Se eatunewets of the yordid, seamy side of life right "Love is the cool drink In the desert | {0% Vector mounted and they are In| (t not been fob My Cat cari! “agiae | visit with the pleasantest anttolpa- will happen, you know! before them in the daily routine, the of despair, ir lest the neighing, snorting | Bowe™ cow {constant wonder to me; | tions. Grant would reach Chtcago op r sister and you not there, aid to the maid Then sho telephoned the grocer. th Yes, it was an English. breakfast tea, ¥ these girls brought out the fact that — Love is the only key that unlocks breakfast tea,” she said through the reading stories Was their favorite pas the heart of the wrongdoer, velng shail be contagious, : v1 der. Thursday, and we would leave es Sei gph hl Ay kia a amine Ain, not getting the dress patterns, make end meet, that the Klimpses road of reform. rei aan, ridicule” immpiies | Hever, seeming to tire: always under, Threndte, Ut tay ‘as T coma. get | vers of anothe nd of hi h n the machine of ma ye subversive of get doin 7” © house while T was gone, s t Telegraph. . Ware drinking soup at a swel| dear.” sald Mrs, Jarr, with a smile. [ve and beauty are the reat eles | Love offered at the right time stops | 2d Ie ner AAT Kipaiitneee during this time either pert oned | Sh, See i alin ectale be proper doings and somebody kicks you on the | "It fs an imposition on my part to) ments, actually have helped them to the angry word and the raised fist. ‘Not necessarily however. The If, or axsisted at, sev 1 had In-, attended to no matter what time Often a man who is most charitable] Sin and the lady just across the fos- | ask you to go out of your way, As so on Love js the fairy godmother that | \%' Jiicuie it ie true, has a narrow, operations: in each case T had Ip-| arenes a received. in life is buried the same way tal board looks like it wasn't her. “Ai ‘To stir the Imagination with clean, ‘transforms the place of poverty Into | Nerd ridicule, it te trie. th * Sisted upon having her help. | Grant came, as planned, and we eee how aro you going to find out who & Matter of fact, Gertrude is KOINE OUL Hecuritul love stories Will bring more the peers, palace, one-sided nee ning: our prone- *"rr average man ts inclined to bes | Gran " . Bome men learn a trade and o 1G iNT Magey Teloeraps cultivate a hearty handshake, There's a fortune and a gold medal ville Banner, awaiting the frat genius In a aub- a) 8) 8 urban community who starts a jitney Once upon a time there was Lown-tnower service,—Boston Tran- positor who did not indo: script. i 7 . » bac! ‘to mix up personal feelings with le women; tc ves,|Spant a most enjoyable evening to- and I don't know When she will be back, guntight Into the soul of girl, esp | When life looms up gray and om- | 2088 0° on A more purely ob. | little women; to Tangy Re ares aaiher. We had an early dinner, then fs and I won't have time to put @ stitch cially one who Is {n the field of prac. Inous and a ray of love entera the} (0'\, “and intellectual we have in But the average m Aothing | tek long ride i my new can | in anything.” teal endeavor, than all the ethical aflver lining Is recognized. active and pp restricted the mean, af & woman of Migs Reese's type, | took @ lone Toe im Moy Of “ * she continued, “L did break Culture lectures and higher Love ts the one jewel that outshinca | §)"* She was of an unusual femininity, a . , e 9 » All the papers spoke of it, mention- . they afri { being Indicted for big-|goou teatures you say it possesses, | All The itast tea, when she By Sophie Irene Loeb. ae a ase. ok [Hos t’yn nde eacot non than fh ‘hs Rave Conner the fhe of ridicule which would properly Meee terete then | when T cautioned him to say noth propaganda that are ady all imitations, } Of: HIG ic ¥ ; eripping personality, tender; and it's one of a pair; but | place of them, —A ittle of Love in the leaven of Iife and enc’ [extend over the, mile Migial’ of the Keen, cold, deliberate, as occasion re- | Ink to Tene ae it wan intended: 6a/t \ halleva in gottiog upant and {Rose 6 Jone Way: Reta Ha8dD 8 ER Tay aisport. ourselves innocently quired, The kind of a woman who surprise, he replied: If that's the worst that ever Sithout Any evil emotions; and we Would make a good soldi ns me Twill have no sae nev ad it_so that In common would face fire without finching, and |T don’t see how you have who “Certainty I'll kept stil, George, bu, been able : ause to} Jungle Tates for Childre th » vounds of others! to. The car's a beauty, and had ft AR + mostly corresponds to de- then bind up the wounds of rae rae si ts complain, 1 was Just thinking to-day See ~ a URS inien. di ‘ ve; with the tenderness of a mother, heen mine [ should have wan! Raby Baboon and Well," said Jimmy, “yesterday|rision, which does indeed involve Bc ten maine T h te pow, fortunate we: have bega, Neyine ee eer tine in tha! when that Bumble Hee stunk me you | personal and offensive fcellng. Thad sean her ayes fll with teara| boast of it.” Then, “Bo Jane dida't no sickness or real troubles," i eo ane laughed at me and Lam sure the Ree] It is true our exclusive attention to when her Samipainles. wer eae not quite so impulsive as you rimmed te mace won” Pee nat tO be buried before thelt) The girl and visitor had both de- | bamboo tree one afternoon when hurt, Lt wasn't funny to me and it| the ridiculous side of things ‘s burt. | but T had never seen and trem- fy the Ba he vuiug Word j tine, q w oO; d both d 1 wish to speak of the working con-! sider to small bay in many cases tL con.) ‘along came Mister Pig and lay down) v the class of work active of bie, nor known her to blunder {n any- | are," [ returned. No, T bought It yasn't funny to the Ree, for he was| ful to the character and a Parted and the litte boy Was PIAYINE in the shade and went fast asleep. | m thing expected of her. after she left for the lake. Miss Resse d clean through,” earnestness and gravity, But no lesa) - ” ditions of the bookkeepers and cleris| YeFY Becessary to turn out, Many {around as though nothing had hap: | "Let's drop something down on hi T see," replied Jimmy's companton | mischievous ts It to fix our attention T often wished that Jane would aigotes the wnat Ce wa tm several big downtown firma Some firms Gas ad Ng tae. Frtume; some! pened when Mr, Jair came home, ear and wake him up.” whispered the| "When you were asleep on my back [exclusively or even mainly on the ROW ANG 86 SEPT sete Re Peel mand ia tt! : nS DAY as high as $1 for supper! !”. ‘\ Han Baby Baboon, orch ona afternoon and I tickled|vices and o i 5 2 OF these places | consider slave fac-| mo ey; some let you ext as much as Hello! old lady ‘sald Mr, aieey What is the use of waking nim | Sour feet and you Jumped up, striking | Buch. contemplation, un a8 counter. while Miss Reese was becoming tw | (To Be Continued.) ; n i " cannot have the 2 Mrs. Jarr didn't answer hin | may need his sleep,” replied Jimmy. ow about that?” asked Jimmy, or * Md sion we have to work from 9 in the) cents to blow in for a couple of cole) What's the matter?” he asked. | ,"L know.” aid the Baby Baboon, “I guess you are right after all, [principles and makes us hopeless or | often be a scofter a7 & , ome) derision, ‘The pyens arina in ite den, morning 1, 2 or three in the morn-|lare or the like. If the firma say, # 2} ing and then come down the next day| they cannot get the help it is because, | and work just the same till midnight,, they will not pay what I think ts a) bursting into tears, “Here you come) thou and after, If you revel you can get/proper salary. Let them pay the out. In some cases doctors ha’ or-| proper wage and they will get all the dered men to resign their positions; | good men they need and not have to but, having families or depend kill the men from overwork. parenta, the men hold on and trust 00. T. ‘ 1 / L [put it would be lots of fun answered the Bab: Baboon, reckless. festers a2e ¢(f ® were breed than] most wild beasts over thelr prey. know,” began Jimmy, Just then Mi Pi t | "The objects to which we should tur;, thora Why “eed ie wear the cap.| A laugh to he joyous must flow , “it may be fun, but it shook himself. He Jooked up st Ot our ele habitually are thoss whi eh Sneering 9 eorgacnl found slong § fovous hearts hold withous Kiag home xrinning like a chessy cat and{ Is not fun for the other fellow. There | boys and said: “You were kind not to| are great, good and pure, the throne with @ bitter, apfenetic misant! me RG fu dann, oontoding, blasaihe ts nothing in the world that ta funny, wake me. I will dig you some nice|of virtue and she © sits Upon {t, or {t may §a a man's mookery t Pp 8; 5 pot caring what I have Pe that does not hurt some on: roots for not disturbing me. the majesty of truth, the beauty of own hol heart venting {teelf in| would the ordinary intercourse of “Nothing wrong, is there?” avkes | I don't believe tt. 1 “Thank you,” shouted the boys, aa| holiness. mooktry others, Cruelty will try | society be without wit to enliven and | Mr. Jarr, sympathetically, Baby Baboon. they scampered down the trea Nor do I deny that a laugher may to ctaper. 7 pevilate ‘ts atrocities by! brighten it, Matter enough! said Mra. Jarr, SA Oe eT Na mR Ram ENTE |