Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ONLY JUSTICE. REAT BRITAIN ot lent 4 American importers who have been deprived of their foreign made goods because of ber onerided bieckade ‘The British Ambesssdor at Workington yerterd | Piste Department's foreign trade advivers that, in case po orders have caused undue hardship to this « their presentation of the fects will receive Mem. At the beginning of the summer the Britirh authorities ex rides to consider the rights « ler the orders has been made. " Dusiness in this city: 4 ‘This is the season when hundreds of buyers from all over ‘ the country come to New York to see and order foreign goods ba ‘This year there is little or nothing to show them. New York merchants are suffering from a serious bandi- cap which, beyond certain limits, js unwarranted and unnec sary. It is time to find out exactly how far American busi- Ress must submit to the cramping effects of Great Britain's blockade. « . That blockade has never been complete or impartial. England * has only maintained it, piecemeal, where she could—thereby discrim- | fgating most unjustly against the commerce of this neutral and | fitandly nation. Under the circumstances our patience has been extraordinary, We do not look upon her concessions as favors but —— A NOTABLE DISCOVERY. 18 strange coincidence that just as the ill-fated United States ~ubmarine F-4 is raised with its twenty-two dead from the bottom naw eubmaring storage battery which will go far to reduce the chance ‘@@onch disasters. © Fifty-five thousand experiments, $3,000,000 and four years’ work homes A. Edison is said to have devoted to perfecting a battery com- * of chemicals which will not eat the metal fastenings of a sub- service in a submarine. @ success: “Let no judgment be passed,” he say: ‘the battery has actually been placed and used on a submarine.” It 2° mont. But the nation has good reason to hope that there need be | BO.more explosions on submarines duc to ignition of gases generated | by the batteries. Heretofore such gases have constituted the worst peril for the crows of these now indispensable craft. " ———_ -+-—___—_. : NEEDLESS ALARM. - surroundings permit them. , way. a liability. We prefer to take our chances as a plain creditor. ~ Hits From Sharp Wits. ‘ ip naaglsaainill boat for protec-|it is largely for women, ‘len. eo ee eee meyer accomplished anythin: m the neck of @ bottle, | nq) % Blade. ties takes most of us longer to make Poh iinae to jo a thing than it to go along 4 do &, ‘Telegraph. ee Plea for the Straw. | A Totes of The Evening World: To the Faitor of The ” were drafted imo the army on thi nost tab! Jnion side, B says is not form vn Would you kindly form of headgear ment? ‘A and B. (yey for no better or On Side Nearest Curb, than because it I8 the! To the Editor of ‘The vening World Which is the proper position for & man to walk when on the street Bhould he walk the curb? ED. y sseured the where the ry's com, considers | Pelused to discuss such cases will the trade advisers. It ix expected that the Britith Government will pase through its | ; lines goods for which American importers have contracted — With German or Austrian firms regardless of whether or not payment + Millions of dollare’ worth of goods which should long since have ‘been delivered to their American owners have piled up on the docks | at Rotterdam. More than & month ago The Evening World called : to what Great Britain's high-handed policy has done to of Honolulu Bay there comes the almost certain assurance of a matine, generate explosive or suffocating gases, or fail to do its ‘under the most trying conditions. Charged and recharged more times on #pitching platform, where it was left for SE ine new bettpry stood tests equivalent to ten years’ Mr. Jarr Has Been Reminded Again That the Payroll’s His Only Friend (1:2 4 niyo ret, ceattier gnea| fo08 Yo grow on, In the uns rows The Jarr Family yy ©) Bien now the great inventor will not join the naval experts =) ‘until | | “Oh, well,” said Mrs, Jarr reluctant- ly, “nobody will see us, have to take Gertrude along to carry burn, Pure Food Law outing. Little)" "Rickety children do not have the) ¢RKs, red meat, fresh air and sun- wotted they of the grief they should| right kind of food to grow on; thelr! #' * Pleagure!| bones show and prove this fact, asyalr and sunshine are foods as well as By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1916, by the Trem has never been Mr. Edison’s way to let confidence outstrip achieve- | encounter while ' Reflections of . A Bachelor Girl Omen Wh te te Pm Paiting Ce (The ee Tat Pent ore) BOT of fre is often bored to death by thé beby-talk with whied AY comen insu hie ntiionsee: bat when he grow Ho epprere } to be the only kind of feminine conversation that fealiy interests a F } j | Too many draughts on « man's pocketbook are api te biow out the love-tight. Many @ man marries one Woman just in order to escape from « lot of others—end then Sirts with the others im order to forget that he te mar- ried to one It makes « man almost as indignant not to be allowed to break bis engagements or his wedding vow it makes « baby not to be allowed to break bis own tors Some men are so lucky in estaping the penalty of their sins that, even though they may deserve eternal punishment, they will cheerfully bank on Gaoding a piece of asbestos hanging on t tes wo Purgatory. Thies is the time of year when the busy little bargain-bunter saves ber husband's money by buying a lot of things she doesn't want for al- moet as little as they are worth } Somehow, a man's faith in mn never paying the doctor an exorbitant fee to keep him as possible ems to deter him from y from there lor After a few years of hard labor in a business office or of stoking in the social engine, while she waits for Prince Chi a girl is apt to stop looking upon marriage as a vocation, and to begin thinking of it as a vacation. It te “a good thing” to be generous—but, alas! {f you are, most peop! are apt to take you for one. 8 Things You Should F now Rickets. createed condensed milk for precise+ 7 ease of chil.) !¥ the same reason. RE ts another diaease of obtls | “in the far North rickets are sald to dren where the early #¥™MP-) be almost an unknown thing, and toms may suggest cretinism,! there we know that fat forms the |but which is an entirely dit ree proportion of the people's food. seems to in the temperate gone ferent thing, This is rickets, | that this condition is most commont disease very common among the] the out-of-door life in the tropics ac- children of the crowded tenement bay for its rarity there. without district, and particularly among for- | doubt. ‘ eign families. Very young children |,,Nemroes seem extiemely suscepti: bie to rickets. It looks a gowd deal have rickets—those under two year*! ay though it is & race peculiarity with —and its cause is malnutrition, or oe, a ae rag ie, both | Poor food. ‘They appear to bear very POOF £000, IMD ro er tity. To poor | DAdIY the climate and confined lite of as to quality and quantity. ‘Oo po our Northern cl jes. food may be added unhygientc sur-| Rickets is beliéved to result from roundings. bod Hey sry , for some reason, cr F ; ime salte In the aystem, and, the Nursing children do not have riok-| hone being unusually Mexible, resalt ets as often as others, unless nuraing) jn the children belng markedly knorl- is too prolonged—as it often is—from|kneed and bowlegged. Too early fifteen to elghteen enonths. walking will be given as a reson of While rickets is almost never fatal, Pomcae et Pree eipepie em ot tea. it is a large factor in the mortality! result of rickets. ot children under two years of age,| It looks us though the cause of all and the more that is known about its|this wretchedness is poverty and cause and symptoms the better the| nothing elae. It means the inability dren in families where the caslier ones| foo showed symptoms of the disease. ing time they ed rich mik and ine and a place to play in. Fresh affected, though tr! ment and eggs, though we divest air iblishing Co, (The New York Evenlug World.) =| they are seriousl out shouting gleefully that they were soing to the seashore. “There, now!" whimpered Mrs, Jarr. The children will the basket and the sun umbrella, and - iO YoU meet anybody we So Wags the World By Clarence L. Cullen Conret Ns York Breslin Worldly ANY leagues be it from us tO) right proteins, while an excess of| supply to the set up any claim to subtlety, | sugar and starch is, as a rule, present.) things that natu this summer?” asked Mrs, “And it has been summer for heat and storms and war and mon- quitoes and everything terrible, dear, I haven't the heart to read sum- mer resort advertising!” “What are you worrying about, then? Mr, Jarr inquired. haven't gone anywhere because you didi't want to go anywhere, why do you want to go anywhere?” “I'm sure there's not much use to go to the country or the mountains or the seashore this late in the eum- replied Mrs, Jarr. be time to prepare the children for school, and I have no nice summer clothes, and if I had the money to get them I'd wait a while and get Mrs. Jarr did not conclude the sen- but implied that they might look askance at Gertrude, the light ining domestic, with the basi ure food picnic provender, as though Gertrude were not of their entourage: So Mrs, Jarr called Gertrude into consultation regarding the commis- sariat, while Master Jarr and little Miss Jarr ran to spread the rlad tid- -elghborhood, and ude gathered the “You have done it. get dreadfull¥ sunburned. They’! ® lot of popcorn, ice cream, furters and other trash and will be sick on my hands, did you promise them that?” “Cheer up!" replied Mr. Jarr. We'll ‘have @ Sanitary, Anti-Sunbyrn, Pure Food Law outing to the beach, We'll take wholesome daintics with us for hildren to eat and # sun um- Finance Ministers of England, France and Russia are shortly | to meet in London, where they will receive reports from financial emissaries who have been sounding the situation feel that we're not eo worse when; mon in children who are fed upon! and healthy bones. it comes to inventing excuses for “gointillating” we're told in advance that that's the kind of people they are. ssst| What to Give the College Girl ings through the Mrs, Jarr and Ger material for the Sanitary, Anti-Sun- Fables of Everyday Folks By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1915, by the Press Publisting Co, (The New York Evening World.) The HumanWolf in Sheep's Clothing. NCE upon a time there was & woman with a kiad heart, She was very unselfish and was always doing pleasant things for her friends. woman had a nice husband who was very devoted to hei moniously together and they were generally looked upon as “an ideal This wife had a friend, ‘The friend had been a classmate of hers and as girls they bad been happy __ The dispiriting behavior of foreign exchange has begun to get on of London and Paris. Whether to keep on shovelling gold British warships for delivery in Wall Street via Halifax or to put out a guaranteed loan in this country are problems that are depriving European financiers of what little rest their agi-| Woe know now, after trying it, that when @ man wears white shoes and) of her concern is the furnishing of | will be appreciated when she wants to white socks he's eo busy thinking] ner room, for every college girl wants | Preserve t about ‘em all the time that he can't| ner room just the best obtainable, get his mind on anything else, If Averoaite had heen ppapanaties trunk, and why not make it some. chafing dish. A fine one can be had’ wah nee 190 ee ane ere don't be- | thing the girl will really need? Pl-| $250, A copper tea kettle with an fae hed huve come down. the ages | lows are always acceptable and a girl | alcohol lamp ig another conventenoe. reputation 48 @| oan hardly have too many. It is wise | Canisters in bronze or copper to B There appears to’ be dread in some quarters that, if things go! et on as they are now headed, Europe will presently find itself the prop- | erty of theWnited States—monetary absorption being already : | '—-her being content to be a sit- She would magnify this or that trifling difference of opinion that the couple had expressed in her In @ half critical view she would dwell on the wife's shortcom- always ending up with, course you know how I adore ber with all her faulte,”” Now it came to pass that (as is often the case) the husband, blinded by the seeming friendahip of the girl for his wife, criticisms to heart and argued witb his wife about them until the quar- fashionable to leave the city for the summer, since the war broke out in id everybody has an auto- “'Deed I don't|be used on the floor for the little} coho! is $2, and then there are candy have to worry about my husband. He | spreads, Those of tapestry or cre- molds—of course the girl will want wouldn't look at another woman if| tonne are nice and can be bad as low are Onn TT Ae these little tin she'd climb right up on his shoulders. fas 50 cents. ‘Nhe black and white pil- ms a iv. . Such fears can be promptly allayed. Any person threatened) with the ownership of Europe or any part of it for the next genera-| tion or so will find it hard to figure whether he is getting an asset or “What has that got to do with it— in Europe and everybody having an automobile?” “Why, don’t you see, people can- not go to Europe to enjoy themselves as they used to, and now that every- body has an automobile they can take little trips to the country and do not need to go away to distant summer * explained Mrs. | sides,” she added, “if they have an automobile they can’t afford any va- reminds mel thought your firm was going to send you to the San Francisco Fair?’ “1 thought | was to go, to,” mum- "We have an exhibit 1 don't know who is in charge of it—maybe the janitor of the fair-—but on account of the war in Europe and the boss getting a new automobile he says he can't afford to pay the expenses of any junket out te the fair an his firm should be glad they have a Job without expectingitranscontinental He's got a new sign stuck up in the office that sort of hints the They lived har- Paternal Piatitudes: ‘I wouldn't | lows are new and popular. Every girl| many a laundry or pressing bill and take million for the two kids I've! will want a home town or State pillow | help the faatidious girl to always look got, but 1 wouldn't give a cent for] song her collection, A New York| {rim Cretonne iaundry |b another one,” It's queer how folks who've ex-| white flag embroidered in orange and! cabinets for holding small articles— dismalness of one rain: or ef Saantiy vow and bere§ gold. These can be had for 60 cents! low as 25 vents, The sewing screen that every single, solitary week-end | and the design is simple to work. One| in oretonne, completely furnished, all summer has been rainy. friend would usually “side' w! husband against the wife and sym- pathize with her afterward, The wife, not realizing the situa- tion, Wondered what was the matter. She was unhappy, where everything the pessim: include the; This may be a man’s world, but who thinks the fish jumped| when you come to examine It closely The friend's father and the girl had | she never knew want or responsibil. Hut a crash came in a business deal and the father of this girl friend Not long after this the futher was stricken with Ulness The girl was left alone resources and with ttle ability to make her own way. Now, this wife with the kind heart, realizing the pathetic plight of her friend, wanted to help her, and offered to which offer the hus- baad assented only to please his wife, At first the girl was grateful and made herself helpful in the home, as Well as agreeable to all who came there. Hoth husband and wire be- of her daily and treated her as thelr very own, As time went on, however, the gradually came to for granted—the the affection of It seemed to her that it was “coming to her,” ag it-were. She grew bolder in this and assumed & possessive attitude toward not excepting the She urged him to take her to play or go to learn the ce, Often on these occasions the wife, tired with household duties, remained at home, but was glad for was well-to-do n reared so that What Is called tuck, good or bad, is) only the result of the operation of the! le by taki i lie an Seasonable Saws: while by taking long pulls law of compensation.-Albany Jour- ulls fro La y lowt everything, was really her worst enemy, what jealous of her secure serenity deliberately trying to win her husband away from her. but with friends who came to the home the girl would, in bantering ways known to such natures, the wife appear to disadvantage by a remark here and there, She seemed to like the idea of conquest. playing double is a precartous bust- ness, even when tried on an unsus- So it eame to pass that 4 friend of this family. seeing things as they really were, spoke to the wife something like this: “You are harboring a wolf sheep's clothing. You do not see it But look before it 1s too late—before she seriously comes between yo those you love: fering before she Sympathy and love that is feigned.” Fortunately this wife had the right kind of husband. of those pillows of ieather with the | will make happy the girl who wants soft handle to slip over the arm would |to keep her wardrobe in repair. A "It won't be any| be appreciated by the girl who seeks! beautiful one, amall enough to fit in time at all now before Thanksgiving, | out-door nooks for reading or atudy- | the bottom of the trunk, is $2, and then Christmas—oh, dear me and|ing. A couch roll in tapestry, chint#| The neat girl will also appreciate or cretonne is pretty, one or more dress bags to preserve, You wouldn't think that actions) speak louder than words if you could) after all, 1t wasn't the loas| wiper in cretonne finish would look| made, or a nice one of cambric can hear some people talk.—Philadelphia tle of Actium that caused| well on the table or desk and these be purchased for 60 cenit Fancy Mare Antony to commit sulcide, but | are only 50 cents a set, Then there ai because he saw Cleopatra (who'd! pretty paper cutter been boating a lot on her barge on|\s the blistering Nile) with a sun-peeled | will want a birthday book to g bled Mr, Jarr, Usually there is no sort of afminity between the cold cash and a hot sport, If you want to see Hatred trans- Imost into’ Volatile Vitriol, Jungle Tales for Children a a yal ec a es Be you know that when you) "How do you dot’ asked Jimmy, pecting wife. “aie . ry] orAbeut, thé time @ fellow gets nis People who pay grudges rarely 4 off until next monup ia pa ig oa baring stoccry bits, | me Rorisone| their sick dogs on leashes look at each other and each other's dogs, women with take everything ‘ We believe that when the returns} Baboon to Jimmy Mon! are all in it will be fund that the I know all about that girls who've worn y blou f iit close the season with| Pretty soon he came across Mister! “What a beautiful tail the preatest number of male scaips|Hlephant and hesald to him: ‘What Mister Pig. you have, i save yourself suf- “What does the sign say?” asked devours you by Mrs, Jarr eagerly, for she believed in m tre, weeks or so the straw ha:| A #aye that in the Civil War men) signs. prettiest rightfully her ‘all| as he started for home. She went to him. He agreed with her, and it was not tog lute for him to realize all their dated from the entrance of the newoomer into their lives, The girl was a woful loser. had to begin at the bottom in the bread winning business. She learned When the Human Wolf Comes In in Sheep's Clothing He or She Goes Out ‘ell horn, “‘Remoember, the Payroll ls Your | Father and Your Mother,'" 0, le the argu. Enigmas of Hsletence-Balt ™s Laundered white vests. us Popcorn. | any one whe speaks about it. Get out! “You look like Mister Elephant,” trous orange | of here’ tet A Then little Willie and Emma Jarr, who had entered at this point, started to ery #0 loudly that they desired to no to Coney Island that before he knew between them or on the side nearest | What he was doing Mr. Jarr had made PERPLEX! the fatal promise, and the children ran For now she mer resort non. At such times the girl had oppor tunity to talk to'the husband about ingly joking anne ped ‘s ‘about ea) the wife as to “her ola-tashl loned | Bons: “Oh,’shucks! 1|had said to him. After Mister Ble-| some roots for you, No’ ind ¢ seaceere was auch a thing as a hatr|phant Was out of sight he cll i but when, youtel ae Peat lous things. M vario ro 6 first time one| down the tree and waited. Pretty ike ‘ister phant you flatter me. a bone disease.| and sunshine ty our lungs gather Their heads and abdomen grow too| than in our stomachs. > hinks large—out of wll proportion to their] of relying On medicine alone tn ca’ bodies. of rickets.-.Cod liver oil ix splenc It is a fact that we all need a cer-| it being a food rather than « medi tain amount of fat, and the food of| cine, rich in the very fat such chil- children suffering from rickets is in-|dren need, Then there are numbe* variably foupd to be lacking in that ene, ve ar ee ee 5 i om e Pp important clement as well as in the |! be whieh OAPs has not bi ie not regarded able yet there are times when we| Rickets are known to be very com-|to give and these make for strong TT year's high school graduate of their natal day for future reference. A photo album will enable ber ‘o sinew preparing to Ain her | mount ail the snapshots taken during college career, and not the least | her college days and a scrap album ¢ clippings from the vollege and town papers, The girl will be glad to see a home- ‘The girl's friends usually s6nd/ town pennant adorning her wall and around o little gift to tuck into the|she surély will be delightea with a at §6, while a nice small one is only hold a quarter pound of tea are 16 to get the serviceable kind that c@n| city & nickel can for holding al- An electric or alcohol iron will eave easily made, of they can be pur- City pillow comes in tan and has thé | chased ready-made, The cretonne blue with the uname embroidered in|pins, jewelry, &¢.-can A writing set, blotter pad and pen! her dainty gowns. These are readily coat and skirt hangers 6 A fountain pen | eitta: A long chiffon vell ond tee necessity to the college girl, Bhe!of the pretty colored sweaters th tl are now #0 Much In vogue are col- necessities, ates autographs of the girls and th want to say something about he all right,” said Mister Pig, any one, you must say some- en peas that if Mj m ter Elephant had not liked thing that 1s true?’ my sald about HIS tail, surely Must ie Pig would be flattered’at what Jim. oy waid about his tail, so he started wonderful tall you have,” that?” ~ “rail! Tall!" said Mister Blephant.| growing ang; asked Mister Pig, You ought to know that I am very| Jimmy thought he, too, is} sensitive about my tall, and I kill] upset, so he went o1 ig . Then Jimmy waited. Jimmy scooted up @ tree and tried| “Thank you very much, Jimmy. to think of what the Baby Baboon|Come along with me and i will ‘aig but mn youtell me I look soon along came Mister Pig. Our tails, at least, are the