The evening world. Newspaper, September 4, 1915, Page 10

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ee a cere ate — “\ wren = Pemmes Dotty Revers Herter wy toe Frome Pubiianing Company, Mos “uw seal THEME Yeas TT ee, is IT TIME? EACEMAKERS are plentiful. The warring nations have only te choose. Uncle Sam, however, gh om the list, leads it in fect. When the right moment arrives he is certain to have fleet consideration and first honors. He proffered hie services early end in terms which left no doubt of his earnestness and good faith. | He will be on the spot with both when they « nm acc mphet pmething. Meanwhile it is not for him to urge good offices until he weakens them by iteration. So it seems to most Americans. | As for alleged Teutonic leanings toward peace, they appear due is tired of shedding blood, to but one cause—lack of cash. Nobody blowing human beings to atoms, © sens, annihilating property and generally de ating # continent | The Pope is said to have called to President Wilson’s attention | “the fact that the terrible toll in lives and gold which is now being! charged off against the warring nations will soon compel a cessation of hostilities unless new blood and new money are heaped on the conflagration.” Only the threatened failure of this sort of fuel is worrying the Teutonic allies. The horrible blaze itself does not appall them. Militariam, despite the strain, is still brutal, masterful, euperb— by no means as yet dissatisfied with itself, Would the peacemakers! leave it thus? | | —— “NO LAWLESSNESS IN COBB COUNTY.” HE Cobb County (Ga.) Grand Jury reports that it has done its best. With the “active co-operation” of the Governor of Georgia, the Attorney General, the Solicitor General of the elrouit, and the Sheriff and his deputy of the county, the jury declares: ‘We have diligently inquired without envy, hatred or malice and without fear, favor, affection, reward or hope thereof, into all the circumstances connected with the killing of Leo Frank. We have worked faithfully and hard to discover who ere the perpetrators of this crime. * bd bd . ‘We have been unable to connect anybody with the pe | tration of this offense, Every man, woman and child in Marietta seems to have “co-operated” in perfect accord with the Grand Jury and the State and county officials. But the jury feels it has not labored in vain: From careful investigation we find that the reports which ‘ave gone all over the country of lawlessness in Cobb County and the City of Marietta, before and after this crime, are untrue, This is the best Georgia can do to clear its name! The rest of the country turns from the presentment with disgust, Cobb County | can flood itself two feet deep in whitewash. The murder of Frank sticks out as black as ev: to THE MOTOR VEHICLE PROBLEM. HIRTY-SIX PERSONS were killed in the streets of this city’ last month by automobiles. Half of the victims were chil-| dren. Ae compcred with the record for August, 1914, when twenty-nine were killed, the motor car has advanced its death toll 24 per cent. Speculating as to the future of automobiles, of which there are now more than two millions separately registered in the forty-eight States of the nation, Secretary of State Hugo remarks: No one can say to what extent the all-conquering motor ‘will still further demonstrate its superiority over other modes of traction. It is perhaps safe to prophesy, however, that our streets will become nearly horseless, our main thorougofares dustiess and the last remnant of public hostility will vanish. There is no hostility toward the motor vehicle, There is only a demand that means be found to keep it out of reckless, incompetent hands that make of it an instrument of murder, So far such means have not kept pace with its increasing numbers and destructiveness, Automobile ordinances multiply. But not so fast as the lists of those it kills and maims. The reason is that it is still far too easy to obtain a license to drive « motor vehicle. When shall we realize this and refuse to risk amateurs and incompetents behind the steering wheel? , Hits From Sharp Wits. higb cost of living gets some hardest blows tog ad men erable emphasis, you can make a safe bet of ten to one that he ts married.— Memphis Commercial Appeal. The best reputation soon ts lost throug fatlure to continue to live up to it—Albapy Journal, Silence is protection alike for men whd possess knowledxe and for those | who are Ignorant, | ° are born diplomats and laugh heartily at the boss's jokes.—Columbia State, “Bometin remarked the Man on * The Evening World Daily Magazine. Saturday, September — By Marti Copyright, 115, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) ERMANY,” said the head polisher, "appears to have come to the conclusion that President Wilson was right in de- manding that passenger ships be en- titled to fair warning from enemy submarines.” “Undoubtedly,” said the laundry man, “Germany has agreed to refrain from the pastime of blowing up non- combatant women and children on the bigh seas, At the same time, Ger- many has blown up a numerous body of vociferous patriots in this country who, protesting their strong a glance to the United States, have sought by every means in their power to aid the Kaiser, “Tis a cruel blow, mates. Behold Herman Ridder and all the other Ger- man-Americans and pro-German sym- pathisers from the Emerald Isle out op the extreme edge or a limb, hang- ing on by their eyebrows! “These gentlemen constituted them- selves the self-appointed mouthpieces of Germany in the United States, When the Lusitania was sunk they didn't give three rousing cheers in ublic, but many of them gave at east @ cheer and a half, rushed into print not only in the German press but in the daily newspapers printed in English with arguments to show that Germany was justified in the massacre of American citizons travelling on an English ship, “When the Germans torpedoed the Arabic, the patriots who hold the American flag in one hand and salute the Kaiser with the other were unan- {mous in their praise of the sub- marine captain, They made quite a hero of him and maintained that the 66 The Week’s Wash alr yar tee Gan | |fact that the Arabic carried no munt- Funny, ten't it, how a man heats up| takes leas noisy than the Pessina | tons of Was meade Be Aleareene WHE, when he gets a cold shoulder.—Phila- | of the Minority."-—'Roledo Blade, | feerer. Seek om at vallanty jane <e-ecbiibunaa’s San . Tt ¢aues a aiin of ee who says he represents the feelings When you meet a man of fow|bo a judge at & baby whom ineie. | Of 100,000 German-Americans, words, declares Jerome with consid- “Yoo, an@ Plenty of Them.” ‘Te Gee Editor of The Brening World: A reader asks if there are parts. Shorncliffe in 1900 and was bitten one while out on military manoeu~- vres. I had quite 4 bad hand for naked bt some time, It was an adder that bit ma@ I have heard it said among the voantry people cf Kent that ers have been known to kill children up CA years old. There may be other there, but the adder ts the only one I ever saw. The one that bit me was a greenish color and about = two and a half feet long. There are plenty around the chalk hills of Dover and nelifte, I have even found them under the tent boards when we shifted camp. ‘The Colon 's Word-Avala burgh Sun, World, recently: “If the Colonel feela #0 restive, why, In the name of Mars, joesn't he take his weapons and go and enlist in the Foreign Legion? ‘That's the place for him and his fe- roctousness.” Whenever I havi |Teports about the Colonel's d plunge te » inig war, such thou: through my ‘mi: but somehow I didn't have the erik to write it, Doesn't the Colonel real ize that he would be President to-d, if, the majority of the United State: citizens agreed with and appreciated his ideas? Why doesn't he take the hint? Thanks be to our broad-minded and noble President, Woodrow Wil- son, that he has thus far saved this country from bloodshed, poverty and misery, which must come through | war, whether wo were, victorious or not! May our good God, who has given us such an honorable President ‘Po the Eiitor of The Evening World| during this important admi to the writer or editor who | be with him throughout a ite following in ‘The Xvening AMERICAN, sunder similar creumstances, Many has admitted the legal right of nd now comes the Kaiser and says he gave orders before the Arabic | was sunk that no more passenger ships were to be torpedoed without being warned in the manner outlined by President Wilson in his Lusitania | notes, That rasping, long-drawn-out |sound you heard the other day was | the Ridder-Koelble platoon of patriots | applying the brakes, “Germany has admitted that #he did wrong in sinking the Lusitania and the Arabic and other ships torpedoed Ger- manufacturers of this country to sell munitions of war to France and Eng- Mt/ land and has tried to buy munitions |of war here herself. The action of |the Imperial Government leaves the star-spangled-banner Kultur cultiva- tors utterly bereft of an issue. There is @ pardonable curiosity as to how on many of them will be separated from the payroll,” $ Prosperity “Dug In.” $ Dannannnes poconnnoenenn’ n Green — “We may be on the threshold,” sald the laundry man, “but somebody has | forgotten the combination of the lock on the door, Most of us have been taught to believe only what we see. The banker meant that the prosperity which #@ soon to descend upon us will be so overpowering that we can't con- ceive its extent. Well, we admit it. We can't conceive it and we won't anticipate it, Just at this time pros- perity appears to have dug itself in,” dans i Gone to Waist. — § 66] SEE.” said the head polisher, that ‘Big Bill’ Edwards says he is going to fight Al Smith in the primaries for the Tammany nomination for Sheriff.” “Bill is too copious around the waistline to be convincing in that old Ajax pose,” said the laundry man, Frankness WOMAN signing herself “Heartbroken” writes as follows: “Iam the mother of three small children and unable to go to any place of enjoyment on account of my husband's small salary, which is $14 a week. I am compelled to do my own housework, and of course I have no time to go anywhere. My hus- band comes home from work even- ings, eats his supper and goes out. When I ask him where he has bee: he answers ‘out.’ When we quarrel about his actions he gets angry and does not speak to me for a few days Yet when we talk things over he tells me he loves me better than anything on earth, and says 1 do not trust him enough, Do you think I am being treated fairly? Please advise me what to do, as I have threatened to jeuve him, ‘But if I do, I will have aj very hard time to support my little children,” | Now this is a case of where frank- ness would avert family feuds and | Prevent endless suffering. This man | might prove to be the most miserable in the world if he were to \part with his wife and children, and yet seem. | ingly @ little consideration would | save the situation, | The selfishness of such husbands | is appalling and is mostly thoughtless. | No matter how low the wages, elfishness is unnecessary. Kind 66T\ID you get that banker who D said the other day that we are on the threshold of an era of unbelievable prosperity?” the pauper as well as in the palace of | yelt when the peer, It does not cost anything | to the wife and children out for By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1915, by the Pres Publishing Co. The Jarr Family — By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1915, by the Wress Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) this was in exactly the opposite di- rection the youngstérs he was seeking had gone, When ‘he reached the halted goat-cart he found at least a dozen children unaccompanied by parents or guardians, “ET seen three kids running down that way,” said the man in charge of the goat-cart, and he pointed past the sideshows and frankfurter stands toward the beach, And Mr, yarr hurried in the direction indicated. The beach was covered with fam- lly parties and sun-bathers, and Iit- tered with paper boxes, food frag- ments, melon rinds and other decora- tions with which those who go down to the seaside beautify nature, A very stout lady under a green par- asol was sure she had seen three children such as Mr, Jarr described running down the beach “jest a min- ute ago!" Mr, Jarr burried on as fast as he could, running search of the beach and re- turn by way of the boardwalk when he caught up with the runaways, and so rejoin Mrs, Jarr and his own offspring. Meanwhile, Gertrude appalled at the charges preferred againet her by the young lady from the east side and the latter's escort, was be- LL might have yet gone well with the outing of the Jarr A family and three of the neighbors’ children, had it not been a crowded day at the seaside, And af «r dizzying rides on merry-go-rounds and a surfeit of ice-cream cones made little Emma Jarr very sick, Master Rangle and his little sister, together with Izzy Slavinsky, followed a clown who walked on his hands to deflect a following throng to the Palace of Orl- ental Houris, One brief moment the attention of Mr, and Mrs, Jarr was distracted from the nelghbors' chil- dren, and the next instant they were uu stay right here with our chil- * sald Mr. Jarr, “and I'll go look for the others.” Seeing a goat-cart followed by ad- miring youngsters in the distance, Mr. Jarr made after it. Of course, and Feuds (The New York Eveuing World.) & walk, A moving picture show one or two evenitigs & Weck is ulgo in-| ing interrogated by the desk ser- expensiv: : geant at the police station, In vain placed Rei the inability to go to such| Gertrude told the story of how her 2 Md Wife Oe Treen ae | dress had caught in the door aot the careless, irresponst attitude on | home, and that in her haste to rejoin the part of a husband—unkindnegs| Mr, and Mrs. Jarr, who had pre- that is conveyed to her by such ac- ceded her, she had borrowed a shawl, tions us the correspondent has given. If you ly love your wife, Mr.| and because of her wearing this Husband, be frank about your move. | shaw she had been insulted and sa} ments. ‘Tell her that to-night you But must meet the men down at the lodge eam ne a Mit aay a we meeting, but that to-morrow night she} He east side stoutly denied | this, may count on your belng with her.| “She's a nut, nothing but a nut!" de- It is the assurance of your devotion and consideration of her that counts. A woman will work herself to death fretting over the endless care of her clared the young lady from the east side. “I never said @ wold to her, and she lammed in to me and tore children, if sho is sure, in the sum-| mp me new Spanish sailor hat, and ming up, that the main pulse of her| that's the truth!” husband beats only ft his family When you have wrung her heart by| At this perjury the overwrought your evasions, and have quarretled with her, and then tell her that she ts the “only person in the world,” wom- anlike, she forgives and she forgets, until the next time, when the past of- fenses loom large.’ They accumulate and end only in misery, It Ix so easy to avert them. ‘The joy of reconcilia- tion becomes lessened; and continued mistrust puts treachery into the mind Gertrude Jost all self-control and made another onslaught upon her tor- F As a of this tase Majeste in a police station the desk sergeant agresd with the young lady from the east side that Gertrude was 4 nut indeed, “Look at her!" denounced the volu- ble young lady from the east side, Where love tx (as seems to be in this cause) it should be manifested. Oh, the anzuish that men could stop if they but k On the oth; her dress is tore in the back, I didn't do it, Her dress was tore all the time, She must have been goin’ around handing out slams to every- body. She's a nut!” So the charge held. And the weep- ing, protesting Gertrude was led to and, trust in himself is treasured by ever band, Ha that trust is square r, she will not question oF de- nd of him a striet account of him- ‘ay from her, A little frankness now and then ts relished by the best of wives. jog farter than bis head end Somehow, too much intellect guer to & woman's be *o Gisey that whe can't see when | (rempling om bis vanity Almost any man can be mate over into a feirly acceplable husband by patebing up bis digestion, letting putting a little passementerie on bh agile it grows; and the oftener « lightly be seems to do it It ie difficult to say which is the greater affliction out of bis way to tell you a foolim what other women are like Salt hard to swallow Chivalry is the cream of the mi O history. N this year, Monday, Sept. 6, will mark a double annt- versary;--a double annt- versary that stands for many things in America’s ermined to make a) “She was wearing that shawl, and | Labor Day falls on Sept, 6. And Sept. 6 # also the one hundred and fifty-cighth anniversary of the birth of one Marie Jean Paul Roche Yves Gilbert Motier, You know this seven-named hero better by this title than by any of his septet of names: He was the Mar- quis de Lafayette, You probably remember his story too. Yet here are a few facts con- nected with it of which one or two may have escaped your memory, While the birthday of Lafayette has never been generally celebrated in the United States, no sixth of September has been permitted to pass without some recognition of Lafayette’s ser- vices. ‘At the age of thirteen he Inherited an immense fortune, and he was only |nixteen when he married a grand- |daughter of the Duke do Noailles. Despite his aristocratic education and environment, he was from childhood an ardent lover of liberty “Republican anecdotes always de- lighted me," he wrote in his Memolr “and, when my new connections | wished to obtain for me a place at lcourt, I did not hesitate displeasing them’ to preserve my independence.” When he first heard of the revolu- tion In America he “expoused warmly the cause of liberty” and offered his | services to Silas Deane, the American revolutionary agent in Paris. “When I presented to Mr. Deane my | boyish face (for I was scarcely nine- teen years of age) I spoke more of thinks of marrying # tuck im hie vanity, smoothing the wrinkles out of bis disposition ané A sense of humor is the rudder that keeps (he ship of matrimony from being wrecked in many a domestic storm The heart is like any other muscle—the more you use it, way to tell you the “wholesome truth.” A man endows the woman he loves with wings, a halo and a pedestal— and then leaves her to stand in a niche in the wall, while he runs off to see ater and criticlam are both awfully good tur you—and awfully Lafayette and Labor Day en en Deerie, Untll bie heart beetns work bie emotions out-rarce bis judgmemt inakes ber nerves oF she ts oul & seam in bis pocketbook, taking manners an falls in love, the more € the man who goes ie, or the Woman who goes out of ker ik of human kinds my ardor in the cause th The credit of the Continental Cone gress was *o low that Deane could Hot procure a vexsel, Lafayette yucht and s#scretiy ehted the #hip Victory to carry himself and & dozen or so other officers across @ Atlantic, Among Lafayotte's com: ions was Karon Johann de Kalb, ative of I but wh long been in the ot F Against the wishes of hin relatives: and the orders of the French King Lafayette sailed for Ameri Fro tire Victory he sent a message to bi girl wife “From love to nit, become a good American; the welfare of America ig closely bound up with the welfare of mankind.” ayette and his party landed near joorgetown, 8. Cy in April, 1777, and then travelied by land to Philadel- phia, where the Congress comm sioned the nineteen-year-old boy @ Major General, and Washington in- vited him to become a member of his military family. The boy General joined the Continental Army in Au- gust, 1777, and in the following month he fought at Brandywine, where the Stars and Stripes were first carried in battle, Lafayette fought as a vol- unteer on foot and was badly wound- ed. After several brilliant exploits he returned nee early in 1779 and was hailed as a During the French Revolution he was an ardent republican and dropped dis title when he was made comman- der-in-ehief of the National Guard. Ho was driven from the country by the Extremists, and the Austrians flung him into a dungeon, where he was contined for five years, It was not until Bonaparte, at the head of an army, demanded’ his release that the Austrians gave him his liberty, Things You Should k now | Vacation Typhoid. | OT all vacationers return home work, If you live in a city your Health Officer will tell you that very many cases of typhoid seem to de- velop in the late summer and early fall, caused largely by Infection while on farms and out of the way unknown places, Doctors, In fact, are |so familiar with this phase that they have given such cases the name of vacation typhoid Remember, that contracted, the | no matter where general cause of the germs into one’s mouth. We havo already learned that the way this is !done may be many—food, fingers or \qies—but the principle ts always the | same, Why not make for yourself a few rules (befo: going away on your vacation) for avoiding typhoid? Rule first, is not to drink water from sources you do not know to be safe, Ask (if not before going to a new place, as soon 48 possible after arriving), where the drinking water comes from, If camping all |Should be boiled, Do not drink from F course you understand that 7 | am going to correct what I write before all this goes into my book. 1 am told that the proper way to write a book is to have some one 40 of flops be fath The ———————_ a cell by the matron | Lost from their guardians, the \Jarrs, Master Izzy Slavinsky and Master Johnnie Rangle conceived the bright idea of begging for nickels from passing adults to finance scenic railroad rides and the price of pop- corn and {ce-cream cones and other holiday refreshments, A rn. noting this, questioned them. Find ing them lost from their elders, he led them off to the station house, All this while Mr, Jarr was basten- the “some one” won't other day [nearly died laugh- During extremely rainy seasons, | refreshed from their outing! tike our present summer, pollution is vinter’s| Washed down into the streams, and ready for the © While away do not drink milk thas typhoid is always the same—getting | water) brooks or wayside wells, as they are most easily made unsaf has not been boiled, Again an aguin has typhoid fever been sp broadcast by milk handled by pers ‘sons either unclean or who are are to know the food is p kitchens or by unc persons, or if the kit room are swarming with files, There in al double danger that infecs tion may be carried to the food. not eat unwashed fruit or vegetabl While it may be true that no o1 can be quite sure of guarding agals all these dangers at all times, {i would be well if those seeking jand pleasure in the country wo! pay more attention to the sanit conditions and surroundings and les@ to the scenery, There is, however, one extra eafes guard which will make assuran sure, and a vacation anxiety, and that is typhol ably m ination, Every person under forty-five travela to new places, and ts thu exposed to infection, should by. all means take this precaution. cities are now offering typhoid va clnation free of charge to all sk for it. B noculated, 'Talks With My Parents. alike SUS ae anes | Typhold takes about two week tima to develop after Infection. By a Child came right out and he belleved in womeg ote, He said: women should have why, I ing, for mother y if 4n 1 believe but if you ask be against it for the rest of. my lf J shall vote against it, write avaint it and see that you don't get a chan to_ vote." Mother shut up like a clam, ing up the beach, and Mrs, Jere walted for him with her childregy But she did not wait at the place ape pointed, for she had taken the little girl to the nearest seaside drug store, As he ran up the beach Mr. Jaga heard the wall of a little girl at the back of @ small seaside restaurant a, He hurried ta that direction and f over a barrel hoop and plunged hea first Into a small pilo of fine, soft co When he arpse he was a sight hold, and could have understudied Mr. Lew Dockstader without fur addition to his makeup. OY a ers

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