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they quiet down. tain it but will not. ment is a ticklish proposi A hot climate, the m bountifulness with which Tepublics do not flourish costs next to nothing and he'll never kowtow to THE through thirteen accident. > takes in that direction. sa with him. Nerve like who thelr ee ee eerie tat ett | ammo eben You come tack ¥ HE excitable citizens of the Republic of Hayti have killed a} President and are likely to indulge in further ructions before | 4 spot and may have on his hands another job of rescuing a constitu-| ~ tional government fram the violence of a people who ought to main-| fe Tn earlier days before the republic, governors massacred Haytians | and Haytians murdered their governors. Since the republic was es- _ tablished in 1822 revolution hae followed revolution and ab cog after President has met with violent death or exile. | The plain truth seems to be that among a million and a half egroes, for the most part full blooded, with only a small percentage of mulattoes, whose pretentions make them hated, republican govern- and lazy population, whose natural indolence is encouraged by the combination for responsible self-rule. ~ by marriage, are frequently polygamous, and although the Roman Oatholic is the state religion, all classes are suspected of a leaning toward the mysterious and disgusting rites of Voodoo. ment constantly tends to become despotic—with resultant convulsions. After a century of independence Hayti has made little progress. On the contrary it is a strong argument for those who contend that —— po | a Henry James may become the King’s subject, but we wager et URING the year that ended June 30 the Pennsylvania Railroad carried 180,000,000 passengers over ite 26,000 miles of tracks This admirable record is due to something more than good luck. _ The Pennsylvania ie a well managed road. It studies railroading; it te few American railroads run by railroad managers and not by finan- _ ciers. Its first aim was to be a good railroad. High finance knows a _ lot about getting certificates printed and sold for specie, but when | it comes to taxing care of rails and keeping rolling stock safe and ee up to date, high finance fails. The Pennsylvania did not make sa By Roy L. McCar dell i aaa The New Haven did. Which is why its stockholders are now ‘ #0 relieved to hear that » year of real management has set it a couple of million dollars ahead and put it in the way of being a regular rail- ‘We ope the agile Sheriff of Hudson County, N. J., gets a g00d rest at the beach, but we guess there's not much the matter FS ... Hits From Sharp Wits. often the 044 who Most : 4 phd oven. fraukes Sentinel %7 Most good intentions bloom avout takes a Wuret of hot| tolls Srigtauior antl be eee tree | eee mae tala to elt Gown. he) MoUUy. “And Y'm sure T do not ert it practice. Becond-Class Matter. hig{ For tineland and the Continent and All Countries in the International Postal Union. One Year. HAYTI. Uncle Sam has hurried a battleship to the | SENSES | tion. ost fertile soil in the world, and an ignorant | the earth furnishes them food, make a bad| The Haytians set little store | ASSESSES The Govern- in the hot belts of the earth where living morals are relaxed by high temperatures. the King’s English, DIFFERENCE. States and not one wae killed in a train to order them. The Pennsylvania runs every month with a smoothness and regu- 8 been one of the The Jarr Family “And now Mrs. Hickett Is going away, you and the sweet girl will get together and pity the poor people In Texas,” said Mr. Jarr. “We'll do nothing of the kind,” said Mrs. Jarr. “Of course Clara Mud- ridge Smith didn't like Mrs. Hickett, \ Copyetamt.: 1015, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World). rT} HAT would you eay if I) their ears burn.” W were.to tell you:that Iwas) “That isn’t true!” said Mrs. Jarr; going’to the ball game this| “I treat everybody alike.” afternoon? . Would you put up a tall} “You criticise the absent alike when |and I can’t blame her after the way scream?” asked Mr. Jarr. you are with the others, you mean,”| Mrs, Hickett talked about her. But “Now there you go!” said Mrs,| said, Mr, Jarr, Mrs, Hickett never did like me to go Jerr. “One would think to hear you| “I think you could spend your time) with anybody else.” tajk that I henpecked you something | better than eavesdropping when my| “And now she is going to Texas terrible! Of course you can go to the| friends call,” said Mrs. Jarr, with| you'll take up with the one that stays ball game, omty I do think tf you have | some heat. “You groan when you see|in New Yor fan afternoon off you might take me any of them coming and get out of} “Well, what good would it do me pony reo Heo te room if you can, but you must fe) fight np qobeits battles when gia » | ieten!” she is going away? asked Mrs, Jarr. ‘I'll take you to the bell ame") wt cant help hearing if I am in| “Then you'll be thick with Mrs. Mud- said Mr. Sarr. by uy] the same blogh,”*said Mr. Jarr. “The |ridge Smith, and the two of you will “Exouse me!” said Mrs. Jar. 't| way the absént friends are roasted |roast Mra, Rangle and Mrs. Stryver?” went with you once, and all I could yi gure a caution.” jasked Mr, Jarr, . eee was a lot of men in their Loa ‘No worse than the way men talk| “Ho ily you talk!” said Mrs, eleeves shouting ‘Kill the robber!’ out their friends,” said Mra. Jarr,|Jarr. “Why, Clara Mudridge Smith is giving @ tea this afternoon and and then was told to sit down. The} 14, anybody, 1 can't help it if people|both Mrs. Stryver and Mrs, Rangle idea of @ lot of: men sliding around) i) 1. thin, ” 8. And Clara Mudridge | will be there. One reason why some of us cannot | in the dirt and chewing gum and Bet} sith ix a swoet girl!” in ®| afford to make as m themselves all dirty and perspir- ' pd dle Rapear A toe . Wwe live more eel iregels sun while you and ten] ¢ — - Jouroal. -_|tnopsand other idiots screamed and @roaned!” “It's the great American game,” said Mr. Jarr; “but if you don’t want to go and will name something that will interest you more, why, lead me to itt” . “Oh, never mind!” said Mrs. Jarr, “I think I'll go to the dressmaker's or shopping; or maybe I'll run in to his can't need « nurse, Pay as you go and the\road will be into “Who will get the roasting in that By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1015, by ‘Nhe Press Publiahing Co, (The Nqw York Evening World) N answer to my article of a few days ago in these col- umns on “The Cash Register Husband" as follows: “I quite agree that the A Cluet ‘To the Miitor of The Brening World: On a visit to Washington recently & friend of mine tele me he was shaved by a colored barber well known ! for his ministrations to the capital's of. | #¢e Clara Mudridge Lortiy ee Aictaldom fondness iu were mi Doasting of ies coleenne who Aes wait poy ister Husband,’ the man who counts a “Why, not at all,” said Mrs. Jarr.| every penny a woman spends, certain- ‘We never had eword. Besides, Mrs, | ly saps the love and trust that a Hickett has gone to Texas to visit|}woman has for him; and it serves for a whil theory of spending as he go thinks he is only living when he sat- isfles his cry of “I want what I want a woman writes} when I want it.” A little reasoning would not go amiss, A little bit of sh Rog-| the old ‘fashioned idea of saving might well be advocated, White it is wisely recognized now wellbeing of every member of the fumily, yet he who works and spends him right that he wakes up to find/ everything he makes usually wakes " in the process, and the rainy day | marriage relation have fled. Every bit | fai" Piette Vary wet indeed, " all the | of self-respect that a woman bas 48) Such men in their best years usu- trouble," eaid Mrs. Jarr. “She never | mistre | iiked-me to be with Clara Mudridge| taxed when she finds she has to ac- | merry Smith I never aaw. such ® jealous|count for every penny she spends, | puiner, Time aity “The way you two would got to- husband.’ He just lets every penuy peice wee mee (he 'Mudridge Smith | oe through bis fingers. I am the wife of that kind of a man. He for- “I don't know what you mean by one;" but they have some lean The Apple Problem, To the Editor of The Evening World: In answer to the problem in refer- ence to the apples and the farmer's sons, I would say that the following iy my answer: “A with fifty, B with thirty and C with ten apples start out to sell them at the same price. They agree to sell at rate of seven for one cent. When A has sold forty-nine for seven cents, \is the partner in the me and must bear the brunt of @ man's mis- gets all about to-morrow and the! deeds on account of that partnership. that odious slang,” interrupted Mrs. | possibility of losi If for no other reason, an ° | han he insists on Ins Jarr, “but if you mean that I ever | loes he get his pay t should store up some of his e: 3 ‘a holiday with a dinner downtown! ts said anything against Clare Mudridge | thy cost of which would keep us fur ings eo that she shall not suffer Smith you say what tan't oo, She's|a week. When I remonstrate or sug- worth two of Edith Hickett any day: it saving the money instead he calla “What's the matter with women aatiaee and urges me to be a that they are all divided up into Mttle | gyi) all his fun, and there you are! I ee mere ere | cliques?” asked Mr, Jarr. “I'yp no-| wonder if there are not other wives| would learn them. ticed that you can only be thick with | situated as I am?” Yer one other woman at a time. Some-|).raveds of them. The oy pendthrift | and times it's Mra, Rangle and sometimes | husband is a result of the twentieth |books, It shoul sometimes it’s ai an pote oF ving, nn SRT bat ? and sometimes | and the er palace al white ors lights ‘have in many cases. made | labor But whan vou ary | heme place fo go when thore la 00 ls to be economteal when her husband without consideration of her, Besides, there are many simple, in- There is some- thing to be gleaned in cultivating the getting when ; P This kind of man goes on 4 “What has. that to do with it?| these necessary qualities in the happy | up to find that he has spent himself tivity, much as I would Ii | gray years in store when they can't throws away the fruit of his labor my dear, there are others--| home haven, in seeing friends there | not hi uainted with good| The: 4e—live, laugh and| ize that we are all occ light, but have an|of these vi a Sot | Ca aad Mr. Jarr Adds Several New Facts To His Large Fund of Ignorance} jcase?” asked Mr. Jarr. “Why, Mrs, Hickett will, She won't |be there and none of them like her,” said Mrs, Jarr, unthinkingly. Everyday ' Perplexities mre 8; Yet ath? Do You Feel Slighted? RE you always looking for slights? You know, they say that the person who looks for trouble always finds it, All your friends may fe the kindest feelings toward you in the world, but because they have done some little thing 9r omitted to do some other is no rea- son why you should take offense. The fact probably is that they had no tention of offending you at all. We are so busy with our own con- cerns that we do not ponder about our neighbors quite as much as our neighbors think. The good natured, unselfish person never feels slighted, If anybody is rude to him, which occura but sel- dom—for as a rule we reap what we | forgets all about it. And as he never broods about himself he does not have time to imagine elights, If you are of the sensitive sort you will easily fall into the pernicious habit of looking for slighte where they are not intended. Oversensi- tiveness comes from lack of perspec- tive—from a half conscious exaggera- tion of one's own importance in the eyes of other people. Now, human society must of necessity be a sort of give-and-take, If I am invited to The Loose-Change Husband| [erste ie oui og is eres 4 ecogn! dinners and dances, perhaps I try to invitations to a reception, It may cannot ask all my friends to the to do so, Should everybody else I know take offense at thus being left out? Most assuredly not. If they are sensible ot her home Is certainly | ally believe in the “short life and the pone they will underatand the situ- forget that | Aton. While it is silly to be on the lookout for slights, and also has the disad- vantage of very quickly making one ! Jany other pastimes, The future has |UApopular, it 1s just as foollsh as well You might term him the ‘loose-change |," ay" oe reckoning with the past. At |any rate, it iun't fair to the wife who as extremely selfish and ill bred to be less about the feelings of Perhaps you think your friend's style of dress is unbecoming. Don't be? so foolish as to tell her so unless she earnestly asks for your advice. If you gi asked you will only offend her un- cordingly. No woman has an incentive | necessarily, because the chances are that she thinks she knows a good deal more about such things than you do, Have your own thoughts and per- mit her to have hers. n't demand if only * man| her confidence, and above all do not make the unkind mistake of criticie- ing any of her special friends you do ppen to like. warnings may sound trite and warranted, but if you stop to think not become @ lost| un oP on ponte for a minute, I am sure your opinion un-, be that my house is so small that I) W! al ere er renee Reflections of A Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland (Cugyright, 1814, ty The Prem Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening World), ARRIAGE te @ photogravure made from the glowing {llusions Love . bes painted on the canvas of the heart. No, Geraldine, there is no more danger in allowing your husband to employ @ pretty stenographer than in throwing a lighted match into @ waste basket. A man’s way of winning « quarrel with a woman is to climb up on bis dignity and wait for the girl to bring a ladder and coax him down. entirely by his own character. tell you what he is. Funny bow a man who would not think of allowing his wife to cut his hair will cheerfully allow hér to cut and dry all of his opinions, sentiments, Teligious beliefs and ens we for him. A man’s opinion of women, like his opinion of Heaven, 1s co! Tell me what be thinks of us and I wi The a man chooses a wife as he does a wall paper; he passes up the showy and brilliant'patterns for something modest, quiet and color+ less, which will serve as a background to make him stand out in glowing contrast. . glory. to be a dream—and become! ee BW YORK is not :> bad in eummer,” asserted a woman who insists upon staying at home because her husband's inter- ests keep him in vown. This woman, however, has some set hot-weather rules which she con- scientiously follows: She does noth- ing that is not absolutely necessary. She keeps herself employed and never mentions the heat, She never hurries, because “that overheats one more than anything else and upsets the nerves,” she affirms. She takes her ease at everything she does and never 3e8. ‘She puts @ couple handfuls of sea- salt into her morning bath and thus gets a cool start for the day. She does her marketing and shop- ping early in the di She says, “The shopping district @ good place to avoid during the summer and I go only when I really need something. There's no sense in Mader tga’ oe ‘ople if you're not going to buy. The poor things have @ bard enough time of i.” = * She always wears low shoes with moderately heavy and never wears @ high colli "even if they are the correct thing in style. Comfort in dress means so much in hot weather,” she asserts. “I always car- ry a parasol when I am out, and I never wear black, red, purple or brown when it is hot, because these colors seem to draw heat. I never go outside between noon and & P. M. Sn a hot day. If I had a porch I would sit there during the afternoon, but as it is, I remain indoors. After luncheon I remove all my garments and just slip on a gee. I darken the room and tak aD.’ ‘This is a habit every woman should Wit, ND now, my dear wife, let mo recommend to thy care my dear children, abundantly beloved of me as the Lord's blessings and the sweet pledges of our mutual and en- deared affections. I bad rather they were homely than finely bred as to outward behavior; yet I love sweet- ness meted with gravity, and cheer- fulness tempered with sobriety. Next, bring them up in love one of another; tell them it ls tne charge I left behind me and that it is tl ay to have the love and blessing of God upon them. 4 For their learning be Ifberal. Spare no cost; for by such parsimony all is lost that is saved. But let it be use- ful knowledge such as is consistent with truth and godliness; not che! ishing a vain conversation or idle mind; but ingenuity meted with In- dustry is good for the body and the \d too. miivert their minds from being taken ith the vaip arts and inventions sordid world, Be sure to observe genius and do not cross it as to learning; let them not devote too long in one thing, but let their change be agreeable and all their diversions have some little bodily labor In them. them; for then there are more snares both within and without. Alas, when a man loves his wife we say, “What a GOOD husband he when his wife loves him, we say, “What a good husband he MUST be!" And the wife, who made him good, shines contentedly in his reflected Wisdom and Philosophy By Famous Authors = FAREWELL ADVICE TO MY FAMILY. By William Penn. n grown. big, have most care for | Wedding day: The psychological moment at which happiness ceases memory. Spending the Summer in Town acquire during the hot weather. Hven the business woman will find it won- derfully refreshing to take a half bie nap before dinner—say, from to 6.30, This woman has iced tea once @ day, but she realizes too much iced harmful, and so substitutes but termilk, which is the drink par ex+ cellence for hot weather. One always finds her home delight~ fully cool. She excludes the sun, and incidentally the files, and throughout the day she has a wet cloth sus- pended across the open window, thus creating a constgnt draught of cooled air. Toward evening she removes the cloth and opens the windows wide, so when hubby comes in he finds a inviting home, His meals are not heat-producing. Soup and hot meats are not on the menu on hot days. Quite frequent; he makes a meal of a dainty sal: whicb is at once nutritious and cool ing. Once @ week the “gude mon" invites his wife to meet him down town, They take dinner at the seashore and spend ® pleasant evening at the cool resort. Another evening he invites her to dine at @ restaurant. “Might as well give her a vacation that way,” announces the man | “There's no sense in a woman cook< ing all the time these hot day: After dinner they usually take one of the several pleasant.sails to be | had in the waters bordering our city ; or they go to one of the roof gardens, On in a while the man forgets work and worry for a day. It gen- erally means a dip in the surf for the happy couple, a restful, refreshing day and a different outlook on life. This thoughtful woman always has some delicious cool drink in the re« frigerator, and “that helps « lot on @ hot day,” she acclatms. I choose not they should be mare ried to earthy, covetous kindredg and of folk of cities and towns be- ware. The world is apt to stick close to those who have lived and got wealth there. Country life and es- tate I like best for my children, (To bis children)—Be obedient to your mother, Honor and obey her, my children, as your mother and your father's love and delight. Betake yourselves to some honest, industrious course of li and that not of sordid covetousness, but for example and to avoid idleness, Mind neither beauty nor riches, but the fear of the Lord and a sweet and amiable disposition, such as you can love above all this world and that may make your habitation pleasant 7 eee, to you. ing married, be tender, affect ate, patient and meek. Be pin live within your means; borrow no’ neither be beholden to any. Ruin yourself kindness to others, for coat exce the due bounds of friend- ship. Finally, my children, love one an- other with @ true endeared love and take care to preserve tender affection in your children to each other; go that they may not, like the forgetting im- | material world, grow out of kindred bay cold as strangers.” am yours, as God pleaseth, in tl which no waters cele no ies forget, nor distance wear away, but remain forever, WILLIAM PENN. Jungle Tales oe 1O-MORROW is Jimmy Mon- ui key’s birthday,” said the Baby Baboon to his mother, “How old is he?” asked the good mother, “Just twelve,” replied the Baby. “I should think you and the Baby Hippo ought to go over and wake him up in the morning,” sald Mrs. Baboon. a “That is a grand idea,” replied the Baby. The Baby Hippo was sitting under a tree beside the river when along came the Baby Baboon, “I want you to get up early and help me wake Jimmy Monkey to-morrow, It is his birthday,” eald the Baby Baboon, “Whate time do you want me to Nor amked the —~ for Children. mine. I will tle a string to and you can pull the string Poy me,” said the Baby Baboon, The next morning at 8 o'olock the Baby Hippo was up and started to the Baby Baboon's. On the way he met Jimmy Monkey. “Happy Birth. ba he Cpoutes at Jimmy, “Same to you,” answei back <2 a re are you going?” Be 1s?" asked the “IT am going over to get the Bab: Baponn Fepiied Jimmy. 4 . “Well,” egen his oo) . slowly, “you just pull he ange which hangs outside his window *vniles the, Baby Ht le the Baby Hip) Jimmy pulled the string, and ‘oped the Baby Baboon came howling te the window, Jimmy said: fered birthday!" } ’@ me, won't you?" ; the Baboon when he a sight of Hippo, guess I'll have to," ani ‘Sad oo ove tho string cn extre pull” \ aT ‘The only way to stop a woman from wanting anything, from a vote td \ a man’s heart, is to let her have it for a little while.