The evening world. Newspaper, September 10, 1915, Page 16

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” The Evening World Daily All Countries ip the International Pamtal Union. osveees ; NO, 19,743 NOT OUR KIND. USTAVE STAHL, German reservist, who ewore he saw four mounted guns on the deck of the Lusitania the night ehe sailed on last trip, and who afterward admitted it war « lie and pleaded guilty to perjury, was sentenced yesterday in, the United States District Court to one year and #4 months in the Ved eral prison at Atlanta James J. ¥. Archibald, correspondent, who under cover of an American passport carried messages “highly prejudicial to this na- tion,” addressed by the Austrian Ambassador at Washington to the Austrian Foreign Office, has been deprived of lis passports by order of Secretary of State Lansing. ¢ Department of Justice is ex- pected to look further into his case when he reaches this country Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, agent of the Imperial German Govern- ment, whose propaganda and methods became offensive to a degree that tried the patience of the nation, was long since persuaded to} leave these shores. So much for agents and tools. Now for principals. Constantin Dumba, Austrian Ambassador, is a self-confessed plotter against order and industry in this country. His high position makes him a dangerous example. His Government has been asked | to withdraw him and his departure should be expedited. Count von Bernstorff, German Ambassador, has proved himself! a cynical subverter of sources of publicity, a lavish supporter of con- spiracy and a transmitter of doubtful pledges. His estimate of our national character is not of « sort that makes us anxious to detain him. His passports should have been made ready long ince. If our relations with Germany and Austria are to continue upon | 4 plane of friendliness and honesty they must send us repre who deem us worthy of their respect. We are tired of double dealing, whether from agents or embassies. Why not: The deadly Arabic hit and destroyed a torpedo? a DESPICABLE SPORT. ERMANY continues to put her Zeppelins to despicable use— raining death upon non-combatants, women and children, in crowded cities. Her latest air raid appears to have reached the heart of London—a feat over which brutal terrorism will no doubt ntatives | te 00 Recon nee Matter siont and. the nent ont one | yell with glee. These Zeppelin attacks upon unarmed citizens are and have been from the first wanton, random massacre. From a military point of view. they accomplish nothing. As for terrorizing the enemy, they can never be carried out on a scale which will make them anything but contemptible crimes against civilized warfare, which cannot fright- en the enemy, but which assuredly set his mind on grim reprisals, We agree with the Italian inventor, Marconi, that Zeppelin raids upon cities and suburbs are “dirty, dirty work” which should make} Count Zeppelin bow his gray head in shame that his invention has been degraded to such barbarous employment. To drop bombs on forts or munition plants may be a regular part of warfare. To blow up non-combatants in the streets or in their beds is to make a sport of slaughter. ek CR ‘ + The allies’ bankers arrive to-day on the Lapland. Mr. J. P. Morgan meets them at quarantine and takes them aboard his yacht. A conference has been arranged in Mr. Morgan's | library. Mr. Morgan comes of entefprising stock. pec Ee: eae THE LONELY CITY HOUSE. N HER marble house in Kast Seventy-ninth Street, close to Fifth Avenue, in the wealthiest, most carefully guarded residential sec- tion of the city, a woman died in a struggle with masked burglars | who had been admitted by confederates among her own servants. _ The plotters executed their scheme not at dead of night but at 9 o'clock in the evening. At that hour, even at this season, scores of persons pass through the streets of the neighborhood, automobiles roll to and fro, caretakers, servants and watchmen take the air on the stoops, and many homes are already open and occupied by their owners. Most of the houses have private guards and the police are specially watchful of the section, Yet this woman, alone in her library, was far removed from the aid of thousands close by as she would have been in a chateau in the midst of a forest, Wealth is wonderful. But to live alone with it, at the merey of paid strangers whom the flash of diamonds may incite at any time to desperate crime, is cruel existence for a woman. It is amazing what loneliness and peril may lurk behind great house fronts in this crowded city. Hits From Sharp Wits. A full pocketbook comes as near) The principal reason why a man making up for an empty head as any-| can't drown his sorrows is that they yom could.Mermphis Commercial | are not located in his stomach,—Pitte- peal. burgh Press, | eee tage . * 8 Ecohomy alone does not get wealth; Contentment is @ fine thing when “ ‘9 \ @ccompanied by enough ambition to| {here must be something with which Keep the blood in circulation,—Toledo SAR Blade. Paar Some men who couldn't repeat the Ten Commandments obey them, and Of second thoughts all that can be| some others who know them word for Guthfully said is not that they are| word break them most Albany Jour- the best but that they are not the] nal, Srerst, oe . ee ae Foolish are those who try to wear a Lack of work oftenest comes from| halo unless they have” wings to lock of energy.—Deseret New: match.-Philadelphia Telegraph —_—_——. Letters From the People “Reserve System.” there, Another fire might be dis Wo the Editor of The Drening Wor! covered in Fiftieth Street, and tho As @ patrolman and a taxpayer of qante of ine Pi would 9 Share en ou! not io str eo Une amiame tam to inform the public | | On TA)" could mote cree was that under the reserve system now 4 helper, pull off a haul by staring tried out in one district the) these fires? Under the old way we of that district seem to me|patroimen were left in our precinct, HE sultry weather, the cares of the day and worrying H ever the preparations of Preparing the children for school had all “gotten on her {t. So, when friend husband returned from the trade trenches in a more or less cheerful mood he did not find his good lady in a receptive one. “Jenkins, the bookkeeper, got back from his vacation to-day, Jarr. “This time he took a trip to the Canadian Rockies, He looks fine, says he had a great time! ‘His wife wasn't with him?” queried Mrs. Jarr coldly, “I forgot to ask, and he didn’t men- replied Mr, Jarr, Mrs. Jarr sniffed. “That shows how much @ man cares for his own wife, or his friends care for her," she sald, “Of course, Mrs. Jenkins would drive me crazy If 1 Wd her around me a day, and 1 don't blame Jenkins for running away from her; tho only won- der is he ever came back. Still, a 600d wife is a good Wife and should be Appreciated even if there is no living with her." This astounding philosophy was too much for Mr, Jarr. He only mur- mured weakly that Jenkins said the trip was one of over 3,000 miles and that the scenery was grand “Much he saw of the scenery!" sneered Mrs, Jarr. “I have yet to know of men going on trips, whether fishing trips or hunting trips or scen- ery trips, that they weren't simply drinking trips. “Gee whiz!" cried Mr. Jarr, “You are always finding fault when I come home and don't start general con- versation, and yet when 1 try to tell you little happenings of the day I think may interest you, you only bawl me out!" Mrs. Jarr regarded him with an alr of offended surprise. “Ilease do jot use such terms here,” sho said coldly. “That may be the way Mr, Jenkins speaks to his wife, but at least 1 do not deserve it, Wurthermore, 1 am hot interested in either Mr. Jenkins or his wife. His going away on this trip was one exc for staying out late to see him to the night train, and I only wonder he didn’t return on @ night train 69 you would have another excuse to be out till all bour Then Mr. Jarr remembered that | when Jenkins had gone away, he and Johnson, the cashier, had seen him off than ever liable to trou-|right in the tre of the beats pa- For example it a fire should | trolled by us, and could easily ‘at. in One and Fifth | tend to any troubles in our reserves would be called Pat, on the midnight train, playing Kelly pool in the interim and a cafe—be- Sween the end of ihe business day Magazine, Frida The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1016, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) and the midnight train, forgotten, but Mrs, Jarr had not. “Doggone it!" 4s a safe topic ‘anyway? about Billle Sunday, the evangelist?” “You had better tatk with Mr, Sun- about him,” “Mother and I went to | hear him once and the way he spoke Mr. Jarr had he growled. nerves,” as Mrs. Jarr expressed | ys September 10. 1915 Mr. Jarr, Poor Man, Peace Except by Talking War! cach other ta the beginning of | a,ft,i# certain that the man or wom. of men like Jenkins and that man Rangle, and that awful Gus, who runs this street, would have done you good to hear, At every word the Rey. Mr. Sunday spoke about those friends of yours mother nudged me in the ribs. When the meeting was over my side was sore.” “What did he say about them?" asked Mr. Jarr, “I refuse to repeat his language,” said Mrs. Jarr. “Only a reformer, ‘Why Your Clothes Are Not Becoming By Andre Dupont Copyright, 1915, by the Press Wublisuing Ue, (The The Color of the Sweater. 8 everybody knows, a sweater was originally intended for a 5 garment, designed to prevent athlete uous physical exercise while resting began Mr.) Sant Swemerm eneral rule, the “sportier” the sweater the more slender the wearer should (ra cah ae ‘unusual color combinations are not for the plump only on the slender figure, ht yellow or gay orange sweaters ure obviously intended for dark- hen, and yet I have seen dozens of blondes so arrayed, If blandes k effect in far better, The right shade of blue They look we r blue silk sweaters th sets off fair hair and brings out all the beautl ww York Bvening World.) porting # from taking cold after stren- between games or contests. Vor 4 long time, however, its first use has been lost sight of by its immense popularity ay @ useful wrap to wear over thin frocks on cool mornings at the mountains or seashore, Every- body, from grandma to the youngest toddler, included a sweater in the vacation wardrobe, It carried every- thing before it. The crocheted shawl, the cunning little Jackets that used to be worn so much, were all banished in favor of the more comfortable sweater, But, when one returned to town the sweater was put away until vacation came around once more. But, almost by a twist of the wrist, anit were, Dame Fashion has changed all that, and now everywhere we go, uptown or downtown, we see the sweater, But it Is not at all the shapeless garment of old. This new sweater Is a fascinating wrap of gay colored #ilk that {s one of the prettiest things ever worn, The old time sweater came principally tn modest white, but these new ones are al colors of the rainbow. They are lovely in pink from a deep rose shade to salmon, in blue from the bright Chinese blue to a pale azure, and they are most gorgeous In yellow or orang® tints, The very newest of all these attrac. tive sweaters are striped and checked, And all of them are made either with gracefi! sashes tied in front or have on belts to give them the new long- waisted effect, as shown in the at- tractive sweater in our filustration, Rut, while this new garment ts so fascinating, fat women are mistak- enly choosing models intended for thin women, and vice versa. As a of blue eyes and delicate The rose pink silk sweater ts for the girl with brown eyes and dark hair, If the blond prefers pink she should select a less vivid shade, There le 4 right color for every Cannot Find gested Mr. Jarr. opinion to express In the matter back to the Nevski Prospect.” ‘Please don't talk about that dread. war!” cried Mrs, Jarr, please don’t discuss it!’ “Right you are,” [see it So Wags the World By Clarence L. Cullen Coreg New Yous Evening World). * \ HIS is about the time when fel- her vacation a month or so ag were of the opinion that married life was a dull job, find that she looks pretty durned good when she steps down from the train with her old- friend, buddy-like, same-ol’-reg’lar- girl smile, Our Idea of the Height of Happi- ness is the Dawning of the Day when | Step, Enigmas of Extstente: Creamed celery, Those “You ought to be with us" picture postals, Boston brown bread, Matronly Myth in curling kids,” who is constantly threatening to the least afraid of his ever doing it, Recently we met a girl by t! Ermyntrude, and it w. stound~ how she looked, acted and talked the name, After reviling photo-plays as silly for some years, we becaine a pro- nounced movie addict, habitue and bug at a summer resort this season, Now we're crawfishing around, trying to explain to our friends our cha: of view. The pitifulest craw! make, We are aware, is when we say . only somo one doing great good in| that can blast an infant blossom, In-| # trifling ac this world, can use such language. Jt the dreadful place on the corner of| was terrible!” “If T used it I'd be arrested!" sug- “Well, then,” said Mr, Jarr, “the only safe topic for a man to broach in his own home is the war. I se) unequal conjectures and fancies|@4nxerous than @ fever proceeding the English are still battering at tho Dardanelles and that the Russians are breaking all the Marathon records; Let mai ,| Upon, for If they be suffe Woman cares to hear about It, #0 replied Mr, Jarr. “And therefore, I repeat, the war in Europe is the only safe topic for any married man to endeavor to discuss" | But Mrs, Jarr sald she could not lers who, when she went off on | we WON'T HAVE TO Watch our “You can always tell whether your husband cares for you or not. Now, my old dear doesn't in the least mind seeing me in a | floppy old kimono and with my hair ‘The wife of the snarly little man punch somebody in the jaw isn’t in name tbat the movies, by becoming more The Stories Of Stories' Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces By Albert Payson Terhune Operas, A Wy te Prem Putting Oe Cie New Vor heewing World) NO. 60. THE PRISONER OF ASSIOUT, by Grant Allen. THANASIO whe & Copt Christian, who lived ta a Nile village arer Apstout Athanasto pved and was domed by Latia, the lovely deusbepe of & fellow vil Soon sary were ww have Bene marten, bet the Bhetk of the village Laila and on wight he fell tn love with her end vowed to add her to his hare: * Now, tn those days an Kay ‘Vin peasant—eapectally were he » Christien had no hope of justice, So at nightfall Athanasio smuggled Latie ebeasd | @ boat thet was going to Karnak {n that city she had an uncle in whose house she could Ptay wafel) hidden The t riing Athanasio went to the Bbetk’s white palace, ea@, throwing himself on his knees before the ruler, begged bim not to tale Latia for his harem, but to spare her to the man who loved her 1 Bhetk, In fury that & peasant should dare address him thus, ordered ts to seize and bind Athanasio and to vive him one hundred blowe cudgel und gore and re noe Ae he went Athanasto ataggered back to hie hut, ewear- that night he covered his face with a white Hinen mosk, armed him A Lover's Hie crawled through @ window into the Bhetk’s bed. Revenge room and almost beat the life out of the tyrant, giving him « | Re + hundred blows, and escaping before the quarde 6 KuINMONed, | tn apite of his diseuixe hin moonlit figure had been reognized by the Sheik, and at dawn Athanasio was arrested and dragged before the Gadi of | Assiout, Vor the Bheik hod not the legal right to condemn a man to death | and was forced to bring the prisoner to the Cadi | rhe Cadt listened to the story, believed the Sheik, discredited the wit- ' for the defense and condemned Athanasto to be beheaded on the {morning of the bday, In the me the captive was to be locked Jin a cell in the prison of Assiout | The Governor of the prison was a fellow-Christian and an ol friend of Athanasio, He did all he could to make the condemned prisoner comfort- [able On the third day Athanasio's brother ‘came weeping to the Asslowt prisoner with the news that their father was dying, a back by stealth from Karnak in the hope of a Jast farewell with her lover. Th tidings so teuched the tender heart of the Governor that he let Athanasio go home to eee his father and his sweetheart, first making iim swear on the Cross not to tell any one of this forbidden clemency and to return to the prison at dawn, Athanasto took the oath and departed with his brother, Once outside the cella the brother told him that thetr father was well and that Laila was still at Karnak, but that he had told the atory, in order to further a plan he had devised, At daybreak Athanasio was back at the prison as he had aworn te be. At ight he was led out to execution, Just as the headsman was about to strike the Sheik rode into the courtyard, He was bruised and wae ewathed In bandages. ad that Latia had come to the exe toner ¢ ep buck, the Shetle announced that he had come to save the prisoner, declaring that Athanasia was innocent. The Sheik knew this, he sald, because on the preceding Geen night he had been attacked and beaten in his bedroom Justice by the same man who had before assaulted him, And Outwitted, this could not be Athanasto, because Athanasio was, of panne: course, locked in his cell at that time, The captive was set tree, As he paased out of the prison the Governor whispered to him, laughing: “It 1s you who have done this thing! It 1s you who have assaulted him, You got out last night on purpose to play this scurvy trick. And I can't tell on you or I would lose my place.” Wi it, Wisdom and Philosophy == By Famous Authors == HUSBAND AND WIFE. the slee and the reason it disquieted Dut not perfectly awakened, it is often By Jeremy Taylor. seen that he is fuller of trouble than M*s and wife are equally con-| if in the daylight of his reason he were to contes' cerned to avoid all offenses of | VEr® te contest with a potent enemy, an are in «a state of weakness and their conversation, every little thing| folly when th firmities do not manifest themselves | 82d to tempt th in the first scenes but in the succes- sion of a long society and ft is not soon return chance or Weakness when it appears| nd the discontent will pass away as But Mrs. Jarr evidently had no| at first, but it is a want of love or | 820" 4s the sparks from the collision of « fluid; even remembering that prudence and that which appears ill! discontent’ proceeding from Weeks at first usually affrights the inex-| dally things d os breed @ secret un- perienced man or woman who makes | disc nible diseasé which is more from a discerned notorious surfeit, | mighty sorrows by the proportion of | “Let them be sure to abstain from all | the new and early unkindnesses, those things which by exposure and and wife be careful to|observation they find to be contrary j stifle Nttle discords, As fast as ¢hey|to each other. They that govern ele- spring they be cut down and trodden |phants never appear before them tn 1 to grow’ white, and the masters of bulls keep nbers they make the spirit peev-|from them all garments of blood or ish and the « fons loose and easy | scarlet, as Knowing that they will be by an habitual aversion, Some men! impatient of civil usages and disal- are more vexed with a fly than with | pline when their natures are provoked yound; and when the gnats disturb by’ their proper antipathies, s ' s Making a Hit By Alma Woodward Copyright, 1915, by the Pres Wublishiug Co, (The New York Evening Worl AS AN AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHER | tivst roll to be developed. Go back ig ip and pester the man about it every per day for a week. When he finally a hands you the prints there are three ot Is as rareas| When there ought to be twelve. Ask him why they didn't develop all of } ae tare you buy your cam-|them., Get quite firm and buffy | | by n era, ask your friends what make | *bout It . Ss 5. Silently he will unroll the 1, they'd advise you to purchase | qisciosing seven totally blank nt Listen to the wondrous tales of what | and two so smoothly black aad peeeet they've done with theirs, Go with | that not a ray of light penetr of them and stand in front of display | €°Urse you don't know how that eouid windows while they point out the | Pes#bly have happened. So nell you any one of forty-two advantages of this shutter and that |{t could. And when you've hen lens. Absorb the fact that it's @ inne youl nae vy that you did at nustake to buy a cheap one, even in | last forty-one of them, the boginning. Pay strict attention | p.4,,N°U, Start to examine the three while they waver between one that | fiat th you see a composition costs $52 and one at $63. Then when | ‘24! you thought exceptionally artia- you've got all they knew, take a two Ue wasn you took It—a tiny toad and dollar bill and go get one. pbuse mountain. Only, sad to rela 2, Buy Nour twenty-cent roll of | Paving focussed on the toad, which | films at a/drug store and get the clerk |!2 the foreground instead of on the to tell you all about it, while 4 man’s | ™oUntain, which ts in the background, Walting to have @ four-dollar pro-/JOUr result ls such that a certain scription filled and a lady Is just dy- |@?¢e-!lustrious citizen woul ‘m you ing to buy a two-ounce bottle of eight- | * "ature faker.” On one of the other dollar perfume. two films you have economically 3. Buy a long black strap and sling | t@ken three exposures on one surface, the thing over your shoulder when | 0M the other your best friend smniies you go on jaunts photograph hunt-|4t you, at the same time extending @ ing, “At a distance it makes you look | hand that 1s twelve times the size it sporty. ought to be to match his face, 4. Start on views, because they| 7. Go home. Tie a bow of pink satin bit of moy-|ribbon on your camera and put it on y to snap.|the mantelpiece along with the sean (Or is It the camera that moves?)|snell, the biscue boy who's sell! Talk views until your friends wish | flowers and tho black onyx oloce wi there'd be an earthquake that would] the bronze busy of Shakespeare on it level all views to the dust, Take your’ that grandpa gave you, artistic, have finally reached up to) heard a woman say our haughty, highbrow appreciation, | ‘when there isn't a — husband's We know a number of lit'ry fellers| catty thing who talk about ie tate writing ‘bes — |for the movies” just as e film| “If only I could get to Caligo: {producers were trying to kidnap them.| bet I'd make good out theres? eatys ~—— heard a lot of non-conneoting, misfit We Move to Expunge ALL the Git-| young fellere say lately, But we oan You-Nowheres DON'TS, replacing | remember the time when we aay each and every one of them with|«lathers of pretty smart ‘6! . DO's. amart but broke—woaring ail ee and plug hate and yet working at “She'll spend a week dressing @ do}! | cleaning the streets of fan Francieoo tor-some reliet-of-somabody fain" wel for tickets 40 the other x toe lett 1, aa jooks, Gee, ain't I the ‘ cae, me _

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