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‘The Eve ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. > Publishes Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 53 to i ta Park Row. New York. President, 63 Park Row. seabed PURRUAR. Fe oneestiads She how, Class Matter. an he Continent and jonal York as For England and the All Countries in the Inter! Postal Union. pate “to he Broning ‘World for the United States and Canada. VOLUME 56.....0.cscseeeeeeeece seen THE TROUBLE MAKER. ROPOSALS for the pacification of Mexico ‘continue to annoy) Carranza. He notifies us that “the Mexican Government and| people will view with displeasure” any act tending to frustrate the achievements of the Constitutionalist Army “representing the, hopes and i2eals ot the Mexican people.” | We see nothing to indicate that the Mexican people are relying mpon Carranza to realize their hopes and ideals.. Nor do we believe, after studying the reports of shrewd observers of Mexican affairs, that these hopes and ideals are to be found among bandit generals and their followers who represent only a handful of the population and who are only intermittently in touch with even the commercial class. The great body of the Mexican people is composed of elementa not to say ignorant minds, mainly concerned with the simplest prob-| lems of food and employment. To secure orderly government for, such people ought not to be difficult, once there is an end of the fight-} ing, massacring and plundering that have been going on over their heads, Tt is in many ways encouraging that factional bitterness, arro- gance and hatred of the United States seem to be concentr: and more in Carranza. A boil often rounds up and carries off more widespread disease. If the cantankerous spirit in Mexico comes to a head in Carrapza it niay simplify the treatment and hasten a cure, a on ‘The Chicago Grand Jury has indicted four officers of the St. JosephChicago Stea aship Company and the captain and en- gineer of the Eastland. The company officials are charged with manslaughter, the boat's officers with criminal carelessness, It is now the turn of the Steamboat Inspectors, + $3.50] One Year... 80! One Month «NO. 19,714 ed more THE GRIND WILL COME. MPLOYEES on Italian railroads centering at Rome are reported | to have refused a war bonus for extra work required during | the mobilization of troops with the statement: We should feel ourselves humiMated if we were not willing to give our toll while others give their lives to their country. Tn the same spirit railroad men at Milan resolved not to accept 8,000,000 lire ($600,000) offered by the Government to compensate them for overtime service due to war needs. All this is most creditable to the patriotism of the Italian workmen and in marked contrast to the state of mind which has prevailed among British workers in various fields. Still, it must be remembered that Italy has only recently entered the struggle. ‘The terrible burden has ‘not yet crushed its way down to the shoulders of the nation’s everyday toilers. Nor have profits flowing into the coffers of employers in cer- tain industries impelled their overdriven workers to demand a share, ‘Ttaly has not yet begun to feel the grind. ny an Forty-four tons of gold jogging through the streets makes a fair parade, But there's more real joy in Buffalo Bill. ney: By Roy L. 7 EASILY WORTH A YACHT. “ VE made up my mind to ‘g one thing,” said Mrs. Jarr, ‘ 'R. COCHRAN’S $500,000 steam yacht must go to the scrap; as she came in the other heap, a victim of rapid electrolitic disintegration due to the! evening. “And ot is, a combination of steel and Monel metal in her hull. : gree Se ctiae ta pears ah pi Whe owner is a rich man, Out of a loss which he can easily bear) trom now on!" | may come a discovery which will revolutionize motor power as applied | to boats and vehicles. Thomas A. Edison, hearing of the extraor- | dinarily swift electrical action in the metal work of the yacht, believes | Mr. Jarr said nothing, as he rather | thought he was due for something anyway—the domestic going having been very smooth for him for some it may suggest the “electrical couple” he has been seeking for years as | days past the basis uf an ideal storage battery for submarines, automobiles, &e. Ba hal bie Jar ons eh Marie ; z i joved her hat; "yes afhere ce y | uh Such a battery is now one thing needed to jump motor Pro-lare going to be 2s and regu-| pulsion to a new plane of smoothness, noiselessness, compactness and | economy. The perfected storage battery will, when found, instantly take its place with the gasoline engine and the ball-bearing as one of the three greatest modern discoveries in the field of motor mechanics. A yacht would be a small price to pay for it. desiitetaieaneanictdeeieitineinmaesnes Mohammedans have always been reputed the most temperate people in the world. Yet here is the Sultan issuing irades lations in this hot | | “Isn't everything all right? asked | [Mr. Jarr, a little awkwardly, ‘I} thought it was. I haven't been doing | anything, I know." “You!” erled Mrs, Jarr. behave all right—when anybody's jlooking, I'll be bound! You are get- | ting cautious as you grow older, Men {are such sneaky things, anyway, Of “Oh, YOU | Feeding Mexico The Jarr Famil Copyright, 1915, by the Press Publishing Co, right. ty tre Breas Binks (The New York Evening y McCardell together, (The New York Evening World.) spoil that child till I can do nothing with her, Jf she’s naughty you en- courage her, and interpose when I go to punish her. She knows if she cries she can do anything with you!" “She looks like her mother when he eries," mumbled Mr. Jarr, is softened Mrs, Jarr a litte, but she didn’t want to let on, “Well, goodness knows you've made her mother cry enough to catch the likeness!" she said, “But,” she added, “I've been at Mrs, Marsh-Mallow's, and her two little children are like little wax dolls, Their manners are perfect and they never get a spot on they are simply becoming | giblet”™ She called in the children and first addressed Willie, “Now, remember, Willie, if you! stick-out your tongue at your little | sister you will be severely punished. Kmma, it you come crying with tales on your brother you shall be pun- ished, too! Now, play.” ‘The children, who had been playing all day without a single discord to mar their pleasure, retired to the din- ing room, gazing sullenly at each other, ‘They had hardly reached the | | The Woman Who Visited By Sophie Irene Loeb i Copyright, 1918, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World,) | NCE upon a time there was no little worry to the hostess lest her a | course, I don't know what you're ey Drees. tee eee x |1 suppose I should be thankful for ke Hits From Sharp Wits. that, What I don't know won't hurt oy me!" It te almost as difficult to be neighbor as to have one. ove A woman can be worth thousands and thousands of dollars and still make a poor wife.-Macon News. eee The man with a pull can do no bet- ter than to employ it to pull up weeds. ‘Deseret N good most of us neglect to put the good in the balance against jt eee “Aw, gee! don't let's scrap,” sald | | Mr. Jarr, resignedly, “I don't feel like It is hard for a talkative person to | *Sbtin#, honest! understand that another may be si-| “Now, listen to the man!” erled Mrs lent for no other reason than that he! Jarr. “One would think to hear him has nothing to say.—Albany Journal. talk that | was @ veritable shrew, a Any man who pays a deserved trib. (COMMON scold! I'm sure that a bett ute to his wife earns the respect of | MAtured woman ne his fellow men,—Omaha World-Her- | but ald. er lived than J am, wi you men are so vain a woman j can't say a word about anything but Sometimes the black sheep of a We te joan i 1 family gets married and becomes the! phe man who knows it all is nover| W&at You think we mean YOU. Well, goat.—Toledo Blade. too full for utterance, I don't mean you, Mr, Jarr, at least e eo ¢ ° ° e THIS time!" | not ‘Tt bad that comes in the course} A burning thought isn’t always as| “Oh,” said Mr. » with an al of a lfetime seems so much because!a light in the darkness.Deseret News, ; ENT ID 68 ie OF oe ——— reliefy “I don’t get mine this time?” “1 don't know what you inean,” re- plied Mrs. Jarr, "But I wish you would let me Ket a word in edgeways, and V'll try to explain; it's about the children, and I must say that the way they act is your fault.” “My fault?” repeated Mr, ‘Jarr, tn amazement, “Yes, your fault,” said Mra, Jarr, “You encourage little Willle to be a “New Jersey's Lesson.” Go che Maitor of The Breving World: Yoar article on “New Jersey's Les @on” voiced another of those warn- ings which should not be overlooked I believe the climate is changing and| that ruftian, You talk of things you did as had @ winter so n bo: running away fro home, helleve, to establish Btate Constabur | bluobirds were seen In the suburbs Ia | ty,ywing atone and breaking. win laries. should, before long, do| January and February; a March go} ‘!OW!Ds ‘ webbite . How many more such outbreaks violence and lawlessness as at must oceur in various parts try before the need of such apparent to every one? Fit- twenty mounted constables probably have had the a dows, stealing fruit and fighting with xchoolmates—right in front of the child, and so tacitly encourage him to do all those things." “You don't want him to be a molly- coddle, do you?” asked Mr, Jarr, “No, and I don't want him to be a hooligan, either!” said Mrs, Jarr, “L want him to be @ little gentleman, You are just 4s bad with Umma, You dusty and dry that was not only a “peck of March dust" but a million pecks of it; an April with one day's) temperature at 89 and another day temperature at 91; a May and June mometer occasionally e 40, and from mid- June until nearly mid-August a rain- fall nearly every day (in spite of the fact that St. Swithin's Day was raln- Jess), Can any one recall such an- other eight months as MJ, Bayonne {nice hospitable family, It had many! mind if she @ nice family. In the sum. | guest might not find enough to eat. 1n | went to tho the afternoon when it was arranged mer the familly went to tho) for the ‘house party fo euioe eee country, where they had «| this woman had to give Tabby @ bath little rural home. and asked that she be “excused.” smber of the family loved} When It came near bed time the Every member o att at tho! Visitor explained that she was afraid she would not be able to sleep as she shackles of city life when they went did not have her “regular massage.” there, Therefore, they enjoyed it to! The next morning it was found that |the full and were sorry when it came the birds in the trees had awakened her, and she was not used to the time to go back to town, It-was a jorning light.” |the country and threw And would the hostess phoned to town for her masseuse to ¢ so she might get some sleep? | A bed had to be found for the mas- | seuse, as the last train to town left too late, | friends whom it invited to Join in the, rural pastimes. |e it came to the | mother had a woman friend who lived Ww, pass that eve! an who lived alone, hoping thereby ing to her hobbi The hostess and to benefit her by the little outing. Sho | her guests had to count her out im thas | her un invitation, An accept-| calculations as one of them. There me from the lone woman, was always something the matter with her. “I could) Not only this, but she was everlast- nor’ ingly preaching about her doctrines. ‘| It was dissipation to Stay up late. Or 1 | there was a tirade against eatin; ; because | ag 6 meat; Dickey and, of course, won't mind if I bring my own brea the doctor has prescribed, or the religion of somebody any other kind of bread is poisonous, wrong. In a word, before the party ‘9 me was over, she had everybody in a The hostess, being a kindly woman, | fighting mood, and the poor hostess and wanting her friend to enjoy her| was worn out in her endeavor to,make reed to the foibles.” When! pleasure for the disagreeable person arrived her head ached,|in the house. was “Just worn to death The blow finally came when the she had to carry the bird cage | tittle boy of the faintly unconsciously ‘abby, and hi t hat, which | tell on Tabby. ‘Tabby's mistress was would into the trunk. ‘Thus,’ very angry and said things, And some When she arrived at the house sho! kind guest, in a polite way, was com- Just begged to go to bed, and really! pelled to conves to the visitor that her couldn't come down to dinner with) stay might better be shortened for the family, Tho next morning she stole into the! ; Kitchen and ruffled the cook by insist-| the party. This was a blow to the ing on making her coffee her “own | woman as, seemingly, she had not seen way." At lunch time it developed that herself as others saw her, She learned she did not eat any meat and only! this moral: certain Kinds of vegetables which; Unwelcome ia the visitor who fomes Were Bot on the table; and thus caused his or her foibles on friends, good of all concerned, to save the ves of the hostess and’ the peace of ning World Daily Magazine, Thursday, A Mrs. Jarr Has Started a Reform That Will Die a Natural Death their clothes and they play the love-|dining room before a loud cry arose Hest ‘Duets for Children’ on the piano | from the little girl, and she came run So I've made up my mind |ning to her mother, screaming at the to set some new rules for our two, for|top of her voice: incorri- | tongue out at me! | sticking go back to your! qui iW" arly | have The visitor pleaded that the | @04_ the | | Age, : ugust 12; 1915 im & By J. H. Cassel | Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Copfright, 1915, by the Pros Pullishing Co, (The New York Kvening Workl.) ARK’ my Daughter, unto the Creed of a Husband, which he be- H lieveth with all his heart. Thou art my Wife and my Rf and the only woman on whom I have bestowed the legal right to love me. Therefore, I charge thee, LOVE me! Love me, whatsoever befalleth me; love me to-day, yesterday and for- ever; yea, even before breakfast. Love me,’even though my top hair departeth, and my girth waxeth until it resembleth Caruso's. Love me, even without a collar and a shave; even though I smoke an ancient pipe; even though I am filled with grouches and the bitter- ness of the “morning after.” \ Moreover, I charge thee, TRUST me, even when thou knowest that I am fooling thee; believe me, even when thou knowest that I am lying. Have FAITH in me, even when my breath is sweet with cloves and thou detectest the scent of sachet and poudre de riz upon my coat lapel. Likewise, agree with me—even when thou knowest that I am wrong. Listen unto me, even though I may babble nonsense and fairy tales, ADMIRE me—even in a bathing sult, when my nose peeleth and my shoulders are covered with sunburn, Flatter me, even though I wear my fishing clothes and be disguised beneath a two-lays’ beard; give me compliments in return for criticism and adoratioh in return for gentle tolerance, F ¥ JOLLY me! Feed me, even when thou perceivest that I am filled to my capacity; feed me and tremble not, when thou seeest chronic dyspepsia staring me in the face and embonpoint threatening my figure. PET me, even though I growl and pretend not to like !t; coddle me even though I be two hours late for dinner and cannot remember why. WAIT for me, until the heavens craek; even though I may only have lingered for a game of pool, or stopped at the fountains of refreshment where the mint aboundeth, be thou ‘THERE’ when I return to greet ma with a smile of joy. Above all, I charge thee, RESPECT my wisdom. Yea, LOOK UP to me, even though thou must, peradventure, go down upon thy knees in order to do 80. For, I am thy HUSBAND, the bestower of checks and kieses, and the dispenser of food and raiment and charity. Therefore, when thou desirest inspiration, look at me; when thou yearnest for diversion, harken unto my jokes and witticisms; when thou pinest for mental stimulus, think of me, And, when thou sighest for LOVE, remember that I married thee, and that, therefore, it followeth that I MUST love thee! Selah. For the Picnic. T a picnic the other day the/in a wooden dish for so long a jour- bawiiee: m|ney, and then it doesn’t look nice. housewife was fortunate enough | Rey, Sheet of paraffin. paper, in the to get possession of a table and) 4141 would have overcome these ob- then lugged over two exceedingly | jectio You could have secured a ea a ad|large quantity for five cents. ‘Then heavy market bask (that had i you might have baked the pork and proved a heavy burden up the Dill) | poy ent ee the papyrus, baking and procecded to set the table, “Lam glad we got this table," she| fr You can buy a dozen for to 25 cents, according to said, “because I've cooked a lot of| #! things and I can serve them better at a table.” ire dinner with a spoon, Sie spread a tablecloth on the n Ret nice, looking ones at ¢, when 1 remonstrated she| three cents a dozen, i ge ‘The foolish woman had cups to rOh, everything looks so much bet- | serve the cold tea in. Sho might have ter on the table.” token the paper drinking cups; she ni 10 Forks and knives are quite un- apicnic. We could haye Willie stuck his And Mrs. Jarr, in the first flush of reform, spanked the little boy for out his tongue, and also yanked the little girl for telling on him. Mrs, Jarr was always strong for peace and happiness in the home, even if she had to estublish a domestic in- | tion to accomplish the same, Things You Should Know Vaccine Virus, N the New York State De- partment of Health has been! asked to recommend .a safe! vaccine for smallpox it has recom- | mended that propagated by its Health riment, for the reason that this virus is protected by unusually rigid| precautions, and that its manufacture | is carried on by a public departinent, for the public benefit and good, with- out the question of personal profit te| ‘aecine virus for smallpox is propagated upon calves at Otis- ville, Orange County, N. Y. ‘The| calves are inspected by the Depart- | ment veterinarian at the time they | are bought and during the detention perlod previous to their vaccination, | ‘These calves are then vaccinated | with virus taken from other calves there which have cowpox, that Is the name given to the isease when cows it The newly have a mild | vaccinated calves then | case of cowpox and @ the following night| more virus is taken from them at just the right time, After the vaccine has been collected ar the ves immediately ns examined y ol State Veterinarian, If, at Killed by the . Wer | masseuse might stay a couple of days. autopsy, | alone in .ne city, and as she was) myscuas might stay @ couple o guest|@ animal is found tuperculous. oF | planning @ nice house party, sh otherwise diseased, the vaccine taken from it is discarded, When the vaccine ts taken from the calves it is collected under care ful antiseptic precautions in a sepa- rate operating room, which is as ab- solutely clean as t ables, having tiled walls and concrete floors. There t vaccine is collected, placed at once into sterile glass con: tainers, sealed, packed ice and! shipped at once to the vaccine labor- atories where it is kept in cold stor. jaborate tests for purity and efi- e made before the virus is issued for use on human beings. At the present day the very success of vaceination may e blinded the Public to its importance, The con- quest of smallpox has been so nearly complete that few but professional sanitarians realize what its horror used to be, It was as if an angel's trumpet had sounded over the eurth, thus spreading the good tidings into all lands that a preventive had been Healt) to make at least once a ¢ his heavy lipen cloth.” | saw ation package at Sate Heb g te Pts t plttee she got | cents which contained five of each fifteen for five cents—and the white!of the following artic Plates, napkins had a pretty gold initial in! doylies, napkins, waxed wrappers and the corner; these were five cents a!drinking cups. A set of each of dozen, And then she brought out | th will be all that, is required for the food, all served in porcelain |a sm: arty. i’ dishes. “Why didn’t you use one of} “3 soon a picnic I will , ‘the deep wooden dishes for your | hav table accessories you | aggressor—are temperaments who enjoy greatly, sul- | silence mos’ found against that scourge of hu- manity, smallpox, The Public Health Low requires the State Department | “But you might have used one ¢ ‘id have bought five for five cents. repe paper,” I informed her, sie had a brick of ice cream the woman was surprised to le riiked in a thermos box which she t she could have purchased ajserved in paper cers. "L hap- white crepe paper table-cover, one | pened to run these sets," she yard square, at 10 cents, and one | tri There aro G3x84 inches at 15 cents, | five « doylies “Dear me,” she sighe nd then | an I could have saved myself the task | age Y another comb: They will take up alad?” red. “You could have | have men’ a. salad?” I inqu' he i eae bought a half dozen for 10 cents.” less space and “Oh, I didn't like to leave a salad strength, Wit, Wisdom and Philosoph --== By Famous Authors STRAY REFLECTIONS (From “Guy Livingstone” by George Alfred Lawrence. > EN aro decelvers ever, even bidden visitor. Supposing that we ages Jmony, ,€0Uld adopt either of these methods, when they mean matrimony. why should they prove more. effioa: ve | clous than they are said to be in their Hard as they may find it to observe | native soil? If the British husband other precepts of the Great Master, | wil allow nothing for the principles tharitably supposed to be inherent in this one at least most women have | ¢ practised easily and naturally for the wife of his bosom—nothing for the hae | Damoclean damages hanging over the eighteen hundred years: "Forgive ’ |maginary plotter against his peace, until seventy times seven,” The acts why should he depreciate hi: powers with their husbands an were! cether? If only he would desist from worsted; how they provoked the pre-| making himself consistently disagree- siding Judge and stultified tho at-| ablo I believe in most cases his sub- tending policeman by obstinately t8-|Gangereds would be little en- noring their injuries written legibly Great sorrows, like great schemes, are generally matured in the shade. {If I had to choose the tombs wher in red, black and blue; how they Interceded with many sobs for the they not written in| 7roJ, Hud Jo Croce the tombe where the book of the chronicles of the { should turn, I think, not to thoes police courts? ‘This propensity leads! with the longest inacriptions of ques them into scrapes, it 19 true, for our | tionable poetry or blameless Latinity, | but to where just the initials and a cross are cut on the single stone. see world in its wisdom will take ad- vantage of such weakness, Perhaps the next will make them some ienan Oh, rigid mother of the Gracchi, how we all respect you enthroned inthe eom- fortable temple of virtue No ee j ble, perhaps unassailable! “She was rightly served,” says Cornella, "Such women ought to be miserable.” Your dictum must stand for the present. The Court is with you. But T believe other balances wtit weigh the svength of temptation, the Weakness of human ndurance, the sincerity of reper nd the extent of suffered retrtoutions when the Father of all that have Hved and erred since the world begar shall make up His jewels. In that day T think the ght of many orthod sx vir oe Of one thing be sure: The strong too—those who endure in fall, I think the wolf's death pang is sharper than the hare's. | ce © fer great Very old and very young people, in the plenitude of their benevolenc sympathize with any tale of woe, how ever absurdly exaggerated; but men | generally, I think, are more moved by ! the simple and great sorrows. We smile at the critical point of a spas- modic tragedy, We yawn over the sor- rows of Werther; but we feel a curi-| gins and dignified matrons wit pat ous sensation in the throat, perhaps| before the softer lustre of Magasien the sligh dimness of vision, when | the Saint. we read in “The Newcomes” how the| qt noble old soldier crowned the chivalry | of a of a stainless life dying in the Gray| Brother's gown. is true that in unraveling the cord man's existence you will gener- ly find the blackest link in it twined y & woman's hand, but it is not less common to trace the golden thread to the same spindle, How many women are there who never meet without mingling in a close embrace, when each {6 to tl other @ murderess in heart? Are thei not men sitting constantly at e: ch It would be well if a system of re- ciprocal mantal agency were put into operation, We cannot send ovr wives about surrounded by a guard, Our| climate is too uncertain and influenza too prevalent for us to wateh their windows ourselves, asx they do at year thorough examination and in- alt State inatituliops, ’ ction of the sanitary condition of | Katon Squa: other's tables who, in the gold when beople spoke and acted ‘ant felt, Would have encountered the sword's point? ts Say a Cadiz, Fancy mounting guard én shrouded in @ yellow fog on the chance of surprising a for-