The evening world. Newspaper, August 23, 1915, Page 10

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Vorla Dilly Magazine, Monday, August 23, 1915 { 2ethths, By J. H. Caso! Take Your Choice |THE CRY FOR MORE PLAYGROUNDS. By Sophie irene Loeb T ke and Play yt Arsoration reports lock of fonds to et + pleye ods for the balance of the mer, The private organ + practically supported ‘a public work, the efficiency of # + wellknown, But ¢ ry year there is more need for exte not work J ¢ of the great prob- —~ lemme in the congested metropolis ‘ NO, 19,786 Little children are forced into all sorts of alleyways, on the streets " aa end imsanitary places a» at t for ' ay that ie child. PART OF THE POLICY. 7 ° hood's chic! asscct 1} year y r m of play- URISHWENT a2 provided by the German Penal Code te « grounds is accentuated Wiay for \ bow universe @trange threat to be held over 6 firm doing business under the lows of this nation. | ‘The German Consul Genera! ot Philadelphia seome to have re long hav f " ilding and ae it as @ matter of routine to send to the German Ambaesador many as 3,000 in one bi ver provision for play becomes one of © copy of this warning sued to « manufacturing | the important civie questions that ery for ‘ t. It behooves | the city government to look this Various p ve been Tt would be hasariour for your firm to ehip locomotives, ougg . Gas of then that the fater ling, housing many i oe, a. See monpenedee saeee . idren, shall legally be equipped with a play r ra play court in Would lighten the treasport of troops, ammunition and pro which there is air, sur tand prote Within the meaning of Paragraph 6% of the (German) Penal | ari er sugge ‘Cobe, be rendering aid to the enemy thereby |possible @6lution that will not only alleviate the present distress, but ‘That the laws of this country take second place to those of Ger | provide for the future The Evening Wor more safe places for p) rrowth of the ty even on American soi) appears to be only another part of the rial German policy of ¢pare-nothing-that-gete-in-our-way. Be that policy rights of neutrality and friendship have one by one to exist. American publicity, American labor, American in- ty, American shipping, the safety of American travellers—each * things Germany has chosen to treat as an obstacie impeding | When « government at war sete out to restrict the rights and | of « friendly, neutral people to suit ite own projects it will iter difficulties. Busy, peaceful nations can hardly be expected to shut themselv : closets to be out of a belligerent’s way. ———_ -4- —- - JUSTICE HUGHES DECLINES. " EFUSING to let his name be used in connection with the Re- publican nomination for President, Justice Hughos wrote to Mr. Stokes: It seems to me very clear that member of the Supreme | Court 1 have no right to be « candidate either openly or tacitly. Teannot do my work here aud bold an equivocal position before the country. It would surprise nobody to find Justice Hughes entertaining a| sense of the duties and proprieties of whatever office he might hel His idea «f a public servant was always that of a man who did ‘well and thoroughly what was given him to do and let the results 4 care of his advancement. | His record is one of which his party is justly proud. No doubt > blican leaders would have been glad to find a candidate of his tt to divert attention from the painful blankness of their - favae slate. Bs: Justice Hughes does not eay that he regards his present honors "7 than any the Presidency would bring him. We do not heartily endorses a ' at will create for the children of the city UO oa The Stories Of Stories Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces By Albert Payson Terhune GOOG’ 0 DOO CCE O OOOO OCO COO COCO COC OOO OOOO OU OOO OOO Orne Copyright, 1015, by the Pres Publishing Go. (T ng Workd), No, 42—A CASE OF IDENTITY; by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. ARY SUTHERLAND was large and plain and very nearsighted j She had $500 a year which she had inherited from her father, and she made a little extra money each week by typewriting. Her mother had married a second time @ travelling salesman named Windibank, much younger than herself. Mary lived with her mother and stepfather, cheerfully turning in all her income toward the family's support. Mr. Windibank was not pleasant to live with, Not only did he take Mary's money as fast as she received !t, but he objected to her forming the Acquaintance of any young men, He made her live almost Ike a hermit and discouraged every friendship she tried to form | And her mother was completely under his influence. Once, during Mr. Wind!bank’s absence on a business trip, Mary and her mother went on the sly to a tradesman’s ball. There Mary met a man with whom she fell in love at sight. His name was Hosmer Angel. He had a weak and faltering voice, and eye trouble made him wear smoked glasses. He was not much of a lover, but he was the first who had ever crossed Mary's path. He and she became engaged. She used to meet him, secretly, during her stepfather’s frequent absences from London, When Windibank wa In town she and Angel corresponded, but he never dared to come : | Pigstarons § near her home, knowing how Mr, Windfbank hated to @ he wished to be 6o understood. The Supreme Court is a great e Mr. Jarr Decides That, After All, 3 Suitor. } bad tres’ shy Me Windibank was in France, Angel But the Presidency of by Arise States ought to be in i he Jarr Famil eyes of all good Americans the highest public office to which a pa Life’s Just What We Think It Ig} ttners return, rer motner seconded the lovers plea’ And Stary” slaty i} 13 And Mary gladiy consented. . 01 The next Frid thi t it ti e nearest c D he ceremo jean rise end one which no man, whatever honors he bore, could By Roy L. McCarde | riven up drinking and not have bor-|real thankful we haven't any real| sary and her mother inane ea: Angel tn nenthen kta forthe ceremony, menerty of ——— y y ¥ Bote) hepa? Weaer taee (prec enore | OnbIe mngulan't we? at the chureh Angel was nowhere to be found. His cab was empty re bad 4 and ruined himself, as he did.’ And Mr, Jarr agreed with her. For | vanished, - te a y a mis: . Copyright, 1016, by the Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World), “Hast thou regrets, little one?”| after all life is just what we.think it. On the following day Mr. Windibank came back from France (havin poliod hat wo it g day ame back from e (having hs FRIEND OR MENTOR? AYBE Gertrude will come| pastime of abusing mamma,” said! asked Mr, Jarr, “Wouldst rather be , arted home before Mary's letter apprising him of her marriage plans had Lo Be faciy ith the PaseAtheridan: apoeal’é M back,” said Mr. Jarr, sooth-| Mrs, Jarr. She never says anything | the half widow of the late Mr. Bis. Pop s Mutual Motor reached him) and he found the poor girl distracted. Before the wedding 9 ENERA BREGO rep] ippeal for ingly. against you. She is very just in every: | gles, or the sole wife and helpmeet ot jay Angel had made her swear on the Bible that she would marry no one peace in Mexico is in effect that if Mexico's well-meaning The hour was late and|thing, And while, as she often says,| Edward Jarr, with all the worldly a By Alma Woodward but bimsele. And now that he had disappeared it seemed unlikely that she ry ; H Mr. da Mrs, J were sitting in the} she advised me inst yi you, | goods that he did thee endow? pyright, 1016, by ‘ress Publishing Oo, could ever marry, n ank refused to call In the police, so Mary took leave the Constitutionaliste to hammer out a scheme of demo-| hoping for # breeze to stoal over the | yourself, if | had taken mamma's ad-| Mrs, Jarr, nestling closer to him in| 66 OUT dine} 7am to) Nene. ee | Ty once co mie mild Holmen whan Hel bad) heard: thei tale’ “that: you , Mexico will be ready with her profound gratitude, |housetops across the way and bring} vice, 1 would have marriod that real| the dark, “But when the weather is ack,” exclaimed Ma, peey- x ; nto the case for you, an “You think I shall never see him again?” she quavered. roma A + : h rrid day. , *) ishly, “That's the very reason pe a @ ‘ N ad tw es and fo - | witl otice, ; en he went to work, Already he suspected. In a general way the one and all stand by the First Chief. superatition and started to whistle! mobiies, and then lost everything and| possibly with the best intentions in|"!Ve 1M the suffraxe campaign, right] girs deucription of Hoamer Angel tallied with that of one othe Lape ‘ ‘ ; + shano now, with posters all over the, of{ her man. Angel's A question arises. If it should actually prove that Mexicans are | fora breeze. By some unlucky chance} shot himself.” the world, comes over and upsets one, | ana" verythi A a @ elt | typewritten letters were compared by Holmes with a typed note from that likely to cool down under Carranza than under anybody else, how |"@ Piped UP & sonK of several Yost) wThat would havc been fine,” said] why, isn't it enough to make @ person FTE isi ites eee lik i i same man, and it was found they had been written on the " . se, “Gee, I Wish I Had « Gist!" lar, sare vryou might have been one| peevish?* © you don't want them to progress.” | Also that other man was the one person on e ean this nation insist that Carranza is unfit to head a government? : “Do you call driving a car, pro y's staying sing! of the brace of widows.” progres-| by Mary's staying sing same machine, rth who could profit financiall It struck an aghing chord in Mrs, . “ * ; (Hence, Angel having forced her to swe: i Pyicpti 1 should say it was,” sata Mr. | sion?" asked Pop patiently, sph fai : her to swear sho iwhat extent ought the United States to place its view of what will | Jarr's breast, “Now don't talk that way,” snapped | Jarr, patting her hand, “And there's |,“ oall it a step in the Tight direc- WOM Ane, BO .one: ROE Ha aan ky nent a r + ; « . s “ ee scat. Oi rely . ." Ma retorted firmly, “Don't y - ank, her stepfathert ultimately good for Mexico above Mexico’s own views, muddled | “Ob, dear!” she erled testily, i Mra, Jarr. "Mamma says, if Mr. Big-|a breeze! Positively a brocae think it's progression When women ch Windibank, with his wife's aid, had arranged the deception, While he ‘they may be, of what will come nearest to satisfying her at thi wish you wouldn't whistie that! It] gies—that was his name—had mar- ‘And after all, may be Gertrude |over Europe are driving motor men aS was supposedly absent on business, he was really courting tory wae ite fe y De, ‘ying At thi8 | reminds mo that Gertrude left us.| ried me he might have reformed and| will come back, and we should be lances, carrying the wounded from|name and disguise of “Hosmer Angel.” As Hosmer Angel he made her take And after all I did for that girl too! ees bss 3? oath on the Bible to marry no one clse. Then, at the church doo . “Ou ; r NO on yi r, the bog The Latin-American nations that joined this country in the peace | Why did she quarrel with my mother nn nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnil Sharia one” ® motor ambulance,”| lover had vanished forever, Windibank could now be certain ‘that Mary are said to show « half willingness to recognize Carranza. They |*"4 lave ine after the nice way : “) 0 id continue to live at home and give him her ine : Don't be trivial, Milton! An my | WoU 5 m her income as usual, and that i siernye scopes. net (hee ey Oeye Ret le Cc tions of friends drive. Why shouldn't 1?" -” | her vow gyould keep her from listening to any one else who might Propose no willingness to consent to out and out interference on the |remembered that my mother was of the United States. only acting, as she thought, for the| $ \ “Have you been at all observing?” | to hei Vuicle Sam’s position becomes more and more difficult. He had | best.” inquired Pop loftily. “Do you know “If I tell her, she will not belleve me,” Holmes remarke uerta. He has no fondness ‘A lot of these people do thelr very A Bachelor ] : own way about Hi no for Carranza, Still, a ‘ ‘ Gir 4 to his assistant, the difference between the brake and Dr, Watson, “You may remember the old P 4 clutch? Do you think you could|<~~A womans ing: ‘There i y ersian gay. shift from first to second, without $ Woman's } . re i@ danger for him who taket h the tiger cub, looking at the gears and ruaning the| 4 Delusion. § and danger also for whosoever enatcheth a deluston ; : ; worst, when acting for the best," vol- car into a fire hydrant? If you|~ ° man,’ ; 4s offering Mexico help, not discipline. And he has invited friendly | inteored Mr. Jarr. ‘The man killed B H 1 I d thought you were going to run over — . to act with him in his endeavors. Must he now be mostly | by accident 1» just as dead as the y ellen R owlan Rak acreat ee eealatea faa or mostly friend? man murdered.” the emergency?” Things You Should Fn “] wish you wouldn't accuse my Couyright, 1016, by the Prom Publishing Co, (The New ‘ork Brening World), “What are you doing? Puttin Py e mother of being @ murderer,” whim- HEN a clever girl lets fly the arrows of wit she should be careful |iy0 ‘Proven the third degree?” asked Hits From Sharp Wits. pered Mrs. Jarr. to see that a man’s vanity is not the bull’s-eye. to do these things and ask me the Fish and Brains, the human brain are concerned Mr, Jarr was not making such an questions afterward.” 10, absolutely no, eating flsh does! directly in thinking, Some day we soot the wiitcips Gommerent oink Push,|accusation, Did he speak from his No, Clarice, a man’s love is not quite dead until he takes your photo-| ar? Ana thon ung dan whee een the not “make brains,” though wel incr sdigntatae ar ait ie Ease eee , heart the term would be only too] granh from the place of honor on his dressing case and uses it to cover Tun it two miles without stalling more have all been wie oat fairy ‘abl and helpful, if not for thinking Occasionally a knocker th: mild for his mother-in-law. He “ than four times, had bumped into only |tale by some ‘one, The statement|for developing a'sound brat his little hammer and gots py ag ericaad ua Gekiet Rod amid ects the wel) paper, one other machine; had disobeyed the yet known. No of i to have for its foundation the|dren, but this is not yet know traffic regulations only twice and |S¢°™* Jevidence that Y Dae ”, " both fish and the hu ce that is satisfactory h: A fool lay plans, but it takes a wise [DEY “Ab, don’t worry, Gertrude will Speaking of “The Compleat Angler,” according to a wife's experience | kotten the xoat of not more than ten |fact that poll! fan And the human civen “Gut ‘to prove that EMe eee man toh them out-—Omaha|come back and rule our cuisine as “ ” pedestrians, Pop told her that she was|brain are rich in phosphorus, and) position of the Brain Chotbate oom. Worra Herald "| neretotore.” no amateur angler seems to feel “complete” unless he has a headache next wel} versed enough to take out her |some deluded ones have been quick |}; the eating of a particuier teats eyed : morning, riends. ‘There are some sitps between “That's easy enough for you to oup and the lip, but a good ie say,” Mrs, Jarr complained.” more afterwards, The first trip was to be a luncheon |t? imply that by eating frequently | food—providing, of course, that the r- ” Of course, every woman looks for a moral man when she looks for a| Long Island Sound. That aes "| wish I could help you," sald Mr, party at a fascinating inn situated on |of fish one can improve one's mental | blood is in normal condition and not morning |apparatus. It is absurd. For the) “!** used, Antes ti Jerr, "but you know I cannot take|| husband, but she ts s0 apt to put on rose colored glasses when one with | \nen Lop left he gat off a let of final |very game reason one might say the! If eaten to think: about tt we wilt ‘There is nothing like a few cloth: i . ; ashe ss ‘ . ! “ Ato: a f “ thing about potash, as the brain | @8T"" Thal kood bra ve for gen- to onuse @ lot of talk--Nashvilic eee | the housework to th ettion, and good shoulders, a straight nose and a curly forelock gets in her way! above eriticism, recelved them, indit- |same thing bens Portals ee eke of {crations been grown and. nourished ner. eweep eo oor here '. upon a dozen different diets ‘At 11.25 Pop’ suggesting the eating of potash? anen dit doing my other work downtown.” It is difficult for a man to reconcile a girl's absorbing interest in pie-|-rpabe wea We sonia, Phone rang. It is now known that There was a big contract hanging fire.| Even if it wore possible to increase we cannot ain or make stron acl “Ob, 1 knew you'd only make fun} tyre hats, pearl powder, Paquin models and court plaster patches with| This most likely was a call concern-|the amount, of phosphorus in our) SVN Oi une irene Muscles simply L of me,” whimpered Mrs, Jarr, 1 brains; but somehow his own enthusiasm for baseball and golf never |'"% !t. Pep took up the instrument | brains, wo hive really fo Wy Of} roany true then wo might bo fuath etters From the People Biet sour reotoee vay aaa | Teo matt fa ‘ eagerly. Reon tenes ves nee ane tho braine of “Why didn't yor y seems to him incompatible with superior intelligence, “Hello” came over the wire in a] think better. ’ + help with the housework, if 4d came sia quayering voice. “Oh, Milton, 1s this| No one knows what constituents of |Ah!mals. No, to be strong we know Capital Punishment. erw. ‘here and raised a row with Gertrude f you?” fe itabinans =|" j of The Brening World: bepaena cee MAPUBIY | that wan the cause of Gartrnde’s Don't fancy your busband has ceased to'love you merely because he!’ ‘You said Pop, “How're soul, asucate woman of sixty-five, and|remecda mncolen? co (y atronath, a ‘to aay to A. E., who deplores fe aFye iran toy Vg no longer seems to notice your presence around the house; wait until he| setting on, mother? Fee eee oe ee Tr Rae meee ane, and Je exeralae be + EB Aten argh od Street Notses, jeaving , Pade, hy ‘ aie act petting co.” waa the’ aoe | ther Say fe seven miles from one | pera s muscles can be _CAGanae Ae O08 OF SNM: hee : sworlng wall. “Oh, ‘Mil - | to st el m ts iny different kinds punis! i ny fa DOE, He | ae the Kditer of Tae Bveuing Worlds “M ther | ft thi d-| gets so that he doesn't even notice your absence. . ton, some. | town and almos ot st om tae developed from many Ait kind ’ fa aatees a atten ia 1 fashioned women who never like to thing's the matter!’ We're stuck in| other! O-o-ob, Milton! of food. This much we do know, that your paper i her people's affairs, the other day protesting againat the interfere in other peop fied In eating freely of the brains of "slater Pop, in a hired car| whatever it may Funny, but the only time when a man seems Inspired to boast about Two hours later yop. ip & | Whatever it ma be that the (six bones per hour), arrived in front | takes from the blood for its novane t noises. I quite agree with the| said Mrs. Jarr. “So she went home| pis “unselfish devotion” to bis wife [s! when he is trying to start a flirta: | won't work and the engine's so hot T}of the sanatorium for aged animals. | ment does not depend upon what pars I have often wished some | after Gertrude left.” tion with another woman. can't touch it and if I did touch it A desolate motoring party yreeted | ticular food we ¢ “How very considerate,” sneered Mr. : wouldn't know what to do, and 1 guess | him, Ma rushed up and threw herseif| What each organ takes from the But this «4 v vory . mead something must have happened to one | on his manly chest. blood depends solely upon the need of and that Jt ie Reosasary for junk. | J#*T- Feb. molar fomee bare ond Love is the pigment which colors the canvas of life; without it exts-j of th: Foor tires, because ite all flat} “Oh, I never want to ge the thing that organ. Our brain does not wear (0 have those rts 8 ht and when Gertri in) lon't reme: . “You can run/out by us at is, to any joh capital punishment. ‘There is| wagons or the strect cleaner to scrape |jeaves your, mother oes serenely | tence Would be a dull old study in black and white, : AA TISTAYE feepanaal atid 1" It's a MAN'S |clable degree; consequently, Invite Flaw that I think should be framed | {he asphalt with a noisy scraper, We a hi intern “There isn't any garage. I'm tele- | work anyhow, And Milton,” hore she | process of supplying our need fee [thet is: No testimony should be|cannot enjoy our porch in the sum. |%2M° and Bays she never interferes Kissing seems to be the only method by which you can give away your | Rhoning from @ Home for Friendless | cuddled very close, “you can vote ‘NO"| general energy Wo are about certain fied as absolute fact trom paid! mer on account of these nuisances, | ¥ith her married children’s affair PUnLAg e00ine Muy TASTES RF A ¥ YOUF | ‘Animals and it's run by an old lady on the second of November, if you! to obtain the necessary building wae or disreputable persons of FLATBUSH, | “Pease don's start your favorite cake of Joy and keep it too, an —beventy years and her helper ig want tol terial for each part, ° ‘ A ’ } ‘ . ——

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