The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1915, Page 12

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% ae i: xe? RY! ¥ of aM ; dear nome district of Brooklyn would q & twisted to Williamagrad. i ') ebd lawlessness whether they strike at property or persone? Wattle at Paredon shot each othen until the casualties mounted to ““inforced army is banging away harder than ever at Mexico City. Za- ‘ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. 1 Dany Seer Ry fe Fstene comenn Bm H Preat 4 Park Row. th . senders LEE Fee SPE how. at the at New Tork as Gecond-Clase Matter. Postal Union One Tear. + Ow MINIMIZE THE RISKS. 'T IS difficult to terrorize people in this country. The activities I of assassins arid bomb-throwers shock us, but they do not frighten ‘us, nor even shake our nerves. The dynamiting of a room at the National Capitol, the attempt “¥o kill Mr. Morgan,.and Monday yight’s bomb explosion at Police rs in this city—three lawless acts of the same sort in quick startling. But fer from losing ite head, the com- ‘Bmanity merely turns a quick and vigilant eye upon police and courts, @emending only such guarantees for its safety as these constituted and defenses can assure—but demanding them to the full. a Against the madman’s weapon no community has ever had pro- J fection, But against anarchy, sedition and deliberate forces of de- struction the public fights, and fights effectively. Free speech we can never give up while the nation endures. But * must we not, therefore, the more mercilessly punish acts of violence é In this city bomb-throwers have long dared too much. The’ | “protest” which they addressed to Police Headquarters should draw & prompt answer in the shape of the biggest roundup yet of anarchists ‘end dynamiters. ‘The public knows there are risks it must face. It maintains a MUST IT BE BROADER? (G74 OME weeks ago the President of the United States warned the Ss fighting factions in Mexico that unless they agreed to stop ‘ killing each other and seek a way to peace this country might ‘have to take steps to rescue Mexico from the melee. ~ What is the outlook to date? Last Monday 18,000 followers of Villa and Carranza in pitched ‘some two thousand on both sides. Gen. Pablo Gonzales with a re- i force is expected to evacuate only when it has fired ite last - cart Mexican bandits are raiding ranches and robbing banks in neighborhood of Brownsville, Texas. And the United States Gov- hears from its agents that famine and suffering in various of Mexico are even worse than reported. Crops are from 50 to ‘pet cent. below normal and the situation is characterized as pitiful. Query: Has Uncle Sam’s hint to Mexico failed to register, and "hen, what about making it broader? et THE BUSINESS TEST. T MAY BE many a long year before City Chamberlain Bruere’s idea of New York City as a big corporation to be run in the in- terests of its citizen stockholders approaches realization. Never- theless there is « growing tendency in discussing the city’s government finances to apply tests and standards of ordinary business. The tion who holds office ceases to be more important than the ques- what tho office itself accomplishes, “No delusion is more persistent,” Mr, Bruere assures us, “than the general saperstition that an executive can guide a great institution such as the City of New York merely by the force of personality and by the authority of official posi- tion. To plan intelligently and to guide wisely and con- the programme of service carried on by the City of New York requires the same kind of facility for executive Yntelligence and contro! as is provided the chief working offi- _ cer of @ comparatively great private corporation.” It is not inconceivable that New York may some day put itself the hands of a commission to be rearranged and reorganized on of the highest grade of service and return to the millions who the city and supply the money that runs it: Complete home might encourage New York to freer experiments in municipal cy. Commission management as so far found favor only in llez cities. But the biggest corporations were not the first ones. Hits From Sharp Wits. your neighbors as yourself, ; Prevert the love growing cold Beange thom often Deseret News. 2 nqcent’on sit charges wrouehs oy ha mt on al jarges brought eo neighbors.—Toledo Blade, i ; eo 8 e The faintest praise that can be given to @ person is to say that he is) well-meani: . . Bome persons’ mental processes are Dighly wetined’ thet they cannot take hold of common-sense thoughts. Albany Journal, say that some men kind of dust that lumbia Record. re made of a . man’s voice ts mental capacity. i . Personal liberty generally demands freedom for itself and restriction for others,—Baltimore American, of measure of his Journal, A Woman Breadwinner’s Answer. ‘To the Kiitor of The Evening World: In anawer to A. D, J.’ recent query: “Is it not beyond the reach of the ity of men to support a wife and family? I wish to say, as a woman who is in the breadwinni: ranks, that I believe nine out of eve! ten women who are employed in of fices would gladly forsake the ma- chines the writer speaks of and take up the wash tub and range and ma- Seal pe At} Sort 26 . O urse a girl natura: re @ t writer or office work Reith ‘compens sation to the home where she has to live on her father’s slender income, But I think I can safely aay that nine ‘be- | Ut of ten working girls would be willing, even glad, to work for and with the man who would atrive to make @ modestly comfortable home for his wife and for her children. Any norma! girl would rather have a home of her own than a typewriter. HAS What's the Cash Loss. ‘When the European war began the the name of St. to “Petrograd,” in order to roid the use of the German suffix ‘Up to us to follow that illus. In such @ case we'd Pittsgrad, Newgrad, Lynch- Fredericksgrad y own ent and "| eardcase!" [are you eure?” Me Germany - o Pied we The Evening World Daily Magazine; We Dreams Agai The Jarr Family “By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1915, by The Prows Publishing Co, (Tbe New York Bening Word), 8 much as I hate to do it, they must be gotten through with,” said Mrs. Jarr, as she put on her gloves. She was not refer- ring to the gloves, however. Mrs. Rangle sat, hatted and veiled, waiting for her and,it was evident that some mutual excursion called them forth, “I don't know what people think of me,” said Mrs. Rangle, as she nipped at the veil under her chin and pulled it down with that peculiar and charac- teristic action of women with which (by pulling the edges of the veil with the hand and dropping the chin as if gulping down something at the same time) they adjuat their veils, “But {t's a thing one must do; there's no escaping ft. But I do de- clare it’s a bother!” said Mrs. Ran«le. It was evidently some portentous effort that called them forth, for final- ly Mrs. Jarr said, “I'm ready, my dear, How does my skirt hang?” And Mrs, Rangle said “Perfectly,” and came over and shared the mirror with Mra, Jarr to see if her own hat and other fixtures were just right. : “Oh, dear me!” said Mre. fier at) “If I haven't forgotten my the door, And she went over to the bureau and felt along the top of the bureau cover, The hard outline of a key was encountered and Mrs, Jarr took it from under the cover, opened a bureau drawer, got out her cardcase, locked the drawer and put the key back under the cover, All women lock things securely and then put the key somewhere where it will be easy for everybody to find. This is a great precaution against burglars, inquisitive servants and | small children, Women also seldom change the hiding place of a key, for when they do they are always eure to} forget where they placed it. | “1 do hope we are going at the proper time,” sald Mrs, Rangle, “And oe | “I'm certain or I wouldn't Mra, Jarr. And the two ladies walked | down the street till they came to Mrs, Stryver's house. “Mrs, Stryver's out,” sald the maid, “Dear me!" said Mrs, Jarr, “Ian't it too bad!" said Mrs, Rangle. Then both ladies teft their cards, “Didn't I tell you?” said Mrs. Jarr, “@he's out calling herself." They then proceeded to the house where ‘To the Baitor of The Evening World Here t# a simple problem for read- ers: “A bare @ palr of shoes for $3.50, A sells Clara Mudridge-Smith lived, “Ms. Bmith ts out,” said the butler, “Oh, yes," anid Mrs. Jarr, sweetly. "l remember now, Mrs. Smith goes to leave our cards.” The two then journeyed on to where Mrs. Hickett resided in @ boarding house, “Mes. Hickett ain't in,” #aid the servant girl. “She goes to see her married daughter in Flushing this day every week.” “How stupid of me not to think of that!" said Mrs. Jarr. “Well, give her these cards and tell her Mrs. Jarr and Mrs. Rangle called and were so sorry not to find her in.” “Where do we go next?” asked Mra, Rangle. “Dr. Smerk’s house is the near- 1015. ‘The i the ca Ce dnesday, July 7 By J.H. Cassel, Mrs. Jarr Enjoys an Afternoon Of Unsociable Sociability est,” replied Mrs. Jarr. “This is the day Dr. Smerk's wife goes riding in the park, isn't it?” asked Mrs. Rangle. They left their cards for Mra. Dr. Smerk, and also their pencilled re- grets on them. “Now for Mrs. Terwilliger’s,” eaild Mra. Jerr, “Sho had a dressmaker in by the day this week, she told me, and she'll be sure to be shopping.” The surmise was correct, Mra. Ter- williger was out shopping, and two more cards were left. “It is a waste of money, though,” said Mrs, Rangle. “Those engraved cards cost three cents apiece. But sometimes, when one is looking over @ card tray in a friend's house, one can find several one left before.” @ The Dower of Beauty By Marie Montaigne Copyright, 1915, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening World), Take Care of Your Hands in Summer. I FILE YOUR NAILS EVERY ORNING TO KEEP THE ™ SHAPE OVAL stick, the purpose. well rounded, rosewater. Polish them with pink manicure pa the Woman's Btay-at-Home Club every Monday and Thureday. We'll minutes’ care of the hands at night morning will eave trequent hours 0. -niouring, / N summer constant care of the hands is necessary for the reason that the hand is exposed to rough exercise and to hot suns and winds. Row- ing, especially subjects the ekin to that blistering sunbeam that comes from the reflection cf sunlight on water, and the palms of the hands to callousea. After coming in from any outdoor exercise in which heavy gloves have not been worn, bathe the hands in warm water to cleanse them. Corn meal or oatmeal, mixed with almond meal, is excellent to wash them with, because the meal not only cleanses but softens and soothes the cuticle. ‘Then, if the sun has been very hot, -bathe them with vinegar in which a Mttle water has been stirred, and gently rub cold cream or cow's cream into, the skin, The hande may then be dusted with oatmeal and wiped off. They will look soft and milky white and feel refreshed, At night uge a lotion on them, or meal and milk, and then cold cream, letting the cream remain on all might. Rub some of the cream into the corners of the nafls every night, or every alternate night, to prevent the skin becoming callous at the cor- * sald | ners, and twice cach day push the flesh dowa from the nail with an orange Repeat this every time the hands are washed, using a towel for It will be easy to keep the nails in good condition if the orange etick is used frequently, and the file employed every day, keeping the nail corners Smooth the edges with an emery board and then soak the finger ends in rain water or distilled water, mixed with glycerine and This will soften the nails so that any ragged may be trimmed off with the nail sclasors, Never use to cleanse the nails, for the skin beneath the nail and the roughened and scratched so that tt will require a long time to remove the injury and to cleanse the nails afterward. Where the fingers are really dirty use oll to wash them, wiping it off thoroughly before washing the hands with soap and water, removed with pumice stone, lemon juice or, if obstinate, turpentine, After the nails are clean, trimmed and rounded with the file into an oval shape, * and then da at the corners harp instrument il itself will be Stains may be ith a clean buffer, Five ‘ten minutes’ care of the nails in the a a a a “I often just touch a card tray where I know some of my cards are and atir them to the top,” said Mrs. Jarr, “especially if my supply is running low.” “Now that’a done, let us go enjoy ourselves,” said Mra. Rangle, and they sought out a sumptuous tea room and regaled themselves with tea, cakes, sgndwiches, &c. A calm happiness of social duties all fulfilled permeates the average woman when she makes her calls and finds the women she called on are really not at home. To Keep Baby Well. By Marion Barton. (Copyright, 1016, by M, T. D. Barton) Sleep and Quiet. UBT as no good gardener puils up @ young plant often to eee if its roots are growing, so no wise caretaker exposes baby’s nervous) system to noise and mauling to sce! how “cute” he is. Quiet is the great shock-absorber that lets infantile nerve and brain cella develop normally. During his first year a healthy baby should treble his birth weight, and his brain increases more than im all his adult years put together. Could nature shout more loudly a baby’s need of rest and quiet? Budden noises, however entertain- ing, hand clappings, booings, jounc- ings in midair and constant offer- ings of toys impinge upon the mys- terious chemical processes which are the secret of normal growth, disturb- ing and distorting them. Most sooth- ing syrups contain opiym, which is injurious, Shun “pacifiers,” those germy blank nipples tied to a string pinned to a baby. If your baby cries investigate the reason and remove it. ‘These hideous “pacifiers” make baby suck wind for colic, Th pe should render babies is enactment of a law fining shop keep- ers who sell these abominations to silly mothers. In his first year a healthy baby should sleep more than two-thirds of the time—and he will if he is not overfed, overplayed with and racked nervously. Up to six years children need midday naps; ten or twelve hours of aleep in all. After his fifth rook, satisfy our inatinct to rock him (and his to mothered) during the day. able. to {to his mame and o couple of moth- Striking It Rich. 1915 By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. O families are closing up their houses and apartments, going in many neighborhoods and are becoming a plague in Central Park, entirely justified, of course; cats in a park are “matter out of place.” There is a perfectly simple way out for people who don’t want A telephone call three days before your departure to the Society its life painlessly ended. generally followed both the city authorities and the persons who re- Of Stories No. 22—UNCLE JIM AND UNCLE BILLY, by Bret Harte. since the day they drifted into camp in 1849. So long had they In a tumbledown cabin they lived, making barely enough to stave off At last Uncle Jim w tired of endless hard luck. Not daring to partner slept. A little later he wrote to Uncle Billy from San Francisco money to follow Uncle Jim to San Francisco, but he wrote to him with unearthed a “pocket” that held $20,000 in gold. He J not find him. He Wrote another letter to “Box 691” and At last, through an old Cedar Camp acquaintance, he learned Unole He greeted Uncle Billy with delight, confessing, when cornered, that he Billy might have become rich without him. you—that I left behind—come down here rolling in wealth and arrive on me 0, would be just the sum needed to buy the ranch he had in mind. They faro game. Soon he had won $100,000. But he resolutely played on until croasing the bay, Uncle Jim read aloud from a m A Squandered __ $20,000. ammmreomoorrn® wind to lone 80 much money. Editorials by Women NE of New York’s bits of thoughtless cruelty is just now re ceiving ite annual rehearsal. All over the city prosperous away to the country or the sea and leaving their cats to starve. The homeless creatures, half-crazed with hunger, are a nuisance, They are slaughtering the squirrels, and Head Keeper William Snydet has been forced to issue orders for a campaign of extermination. He is But no household is justified in deliberately deserting even its least- considered member. to take the cat on the vacation trip, who have no neighbor with whom to leave it, yet who cannot afford to have it boarded. for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals will bring a messenger to your home, With no charge to you, the cat will be taken away ard In comparison to leaving the animal without provision or pro- tection, such a course of action is infinitely kind, and if it were more main in town all summer would be spared much annoyance. The Stories Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces ’ By Albert Payson Terhune Coprright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New Tork Bwentag World). ’ r HEY were partners in a worn out claim at California’s “Cedar it Camp,” these two old chums, who had been inseparables been there that the other miners called them “Uncle Jim and Uncle Billy.” Their names were James Foster and William Fall. starvation, utterly devoted to each other and seeking no outside com penionship. Their mutual affection was a byword in the camp. suggest to his loyal okthum that they separate, he broke up the partner- ship by sneaking away from Cedar Camp under cover of night while his that he had embarked on a new venture and was making a fortune. Uncle Billy was heartbroken at his friend's desertion. He had no pitiful frequency to the only address he knew: “Post-Office Box 691.” One day, to hia own blank amazement, Uncle Billy “struck it rich.” He sold out, bought two $10,000 drafts and started for Ban Francisco to divide his wealth with his beloved partner. got in reply @ note saying Uncle Jim was just starting up country on a big business deal. In his letter Uncle Billy did not mention his fortune. He Jim's address, Washerwoman's Bay, the Presidio, was the place, in a row of tumbledown shanties, And in the most forlorn hovel in the whole row was only a street sweeper, but that he had already saved $960 toward buy- ing a ranch. He pointed to his broom as the utensil with which he had “What would you hev done?” asked Uncle Billy, leading up to the eur prise he was planning. in this shanty with that broom.” Unele Billy's air castles tumbled. He answered feebly that he had only would become partners again and start for the ranch next day. Uncle Billy tramped back to town, bought a draft for $570, pocketed it he had lost every cent he owned in the world except the $570 draft. Next morning he went out to Uncle Jim's shanty, taking the draft with newspaper the story of an unknown man who had aquandered nearly $20,000 in the “Arcade” the night “There!” snorted Uncle Jim, as he finished reading. “Did such Godforsaken foolishness?” ne ain But when he sought Uncle Jim in the city he could wanted to surprise Uncle Jim by telling him about it, face to face. Uncle Jim lived. made so much money and he added that at first he had been afraid Uncle “I couldn't of stood up under tt,” declaréd Uncle Jim, “to have naa 0 in the world. Uncle Jim shouted joyously that the $570, with his own and then went to the “Arcade,” a gambling house. There he bucked the him, and together they went to look over the ranch. On the ferryboat, before. The paper said the man had seemed almost “Never,” said Uncle Billy, sadly. Cupid’s Summer Correspondence By Alma Woodward. Copyright, 2015, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Bar Harbor, Me, fling. I'll drive my arrows FAR PSYCHE: I'm looking for-| the hearts of all pe deep into D ward to this trip more tha] of swains; but not until the right any I've taken in years, I have) one comes along, the one I've picked in tow a dream of a girl, seventeen, fou Bap mate, shall her heart be blond as the ray of the dawning sun,| ‘RONG 0 dainty as @ bluebell, with laughing] our trip, which wil” one = | rose-pink Mps and tiny feet that|/doubt, to every summer = scarce kiss the ground es she walks. prrminedce in the East, 7 bes Her name is Rosemarie and her] front men wins ay che of the dit- parents have just taken her from the schoolroom and her chrysalis of charm. fall victim to her It will bs amusing, for thore are #0 blue serge frocks to swathe her slim, young form in the gay trappings many types—and f' kao shall pull the at, of a social butterfly. strings and the; ‘They intend that she shall marry well. That 4s what this summer shall dance, * laugh, beartwhole Sepmnaee. bg until T place her in the arms of her campaign is for, They think they are| {7110 lover and transfix both hearts going to barter her fresh young beauty for a matrimonial fish with scales of twenty-two karat gold, or with one pearl-tipped arrow, one with a ehopworn coro! ahandle So that you may know wh up against I will give wea an word-picture of Rosemarie's mother, She has the soul of a Lucrezia Bor- sia, {he temper of @ Queen Elizabeth — 6 appearance of class nightmare, UF a ler neck is tortured Int black velvet bands in the ‘os ad dog collars of pearls and diamonds at nig conceal the tr ging of her centre chin, “et Oe er shoulders and back are too ded by years of averindtionies in French cooking and mellow wines, and her complexion, bought on Fifth eaten estates under his fins, But they bargain without Cupid! On, I'm going to let her have her ings, with a string in the nightie hem to pull up into a bag in c baby kicks the covers off. Romping after sup) excitements of picture books and stories at such times dis- pore jeoplessness,' The best | Avenue, is aT meter era eA as | MART lag fi ae ae ce ‘tter eu! pul er o low she come to h ped to sort lullables ingtead of notse ail pial and ‘gold and laughter . read re tome eee outcries and dificult | offing, Tete tl hep * F4 breath! should be investigated by | heart's in his He row troke doctor. Bleeplessness due to bad tem-jon his crew, he looks like as ‘be cured by leaving baby zouk fresk god 98 the tennis 5 emples bound | Te He is going to be the Arst yp be rat of Rosemarie, |, you in full how I made him 5 wit eat and what abe said, Youre, OUDIDy !

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