The evening world. Newspaper, October 2, 1915, Page 8

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- . oe qe La ss The Evenimg World Daily Magazine. Saturday, October 2. 1915 Gre eFiny wierd. Pemtunes Paty Beseys beroay te > PALF POLATRRR Pree ane , NOle BAR Tee coer FOLATE RR fe ° Wtered ot te Pony orrice ot Rete «© The Prening ee The Woman of It ; 4- By Helen Rowland : Creer er es eS a ee eee en 4 arn PULITERR one Company, Mon 68 te " ‘ Werte for the Untied Mratee j She Tells Why the Plirtation ts “Worth the Candle.” nd | orate OT Hh Bier te Beate agnin th” ulied the o_ “ te oe vinwsure. ae the Mechelen Gropped oo « her ay ane s oe eatended bie Ringers eretefuly towne A VOLUME bo = ‘Te begin wheih be queried ying oF oe o8 ‘ ————— Just ring Mr Weatherty ere ot Fee ower mem ar ~ oF unperturbed enthusiasm, “lm « " Womia « Savi at hew vous. ld Summer!’ aren't you? ye Lo AL. 1 7 oteee ant my fr ond yah Ae Menas> ’ Mr Weather eee at And I'm BO gind it's all ove tm “Um.” remarked the Becher unermpethetivaliy that «18 at ae . i orer—if 1 lewdent you fori just « “for your , fom? h touch of diem » ohOT + come ry Rn ne ee = Te } ena eres ie mee ! * . © tere ovement oie ! Fi ueidated the Wid toh every woman~ ar ee ee Ce oe ee “ igh ate oo o~ 4 w dow, “whiet ry wome i mere tee Nhe we day ot mepheler, 10 Wery Man too—needs ag Much ae be heeds iron-quinine-and “¢ hase, Neary Peete, ome County strychoine in the epring It builds up the flabby muscles of the se Re 8 Hams te Rew Bone Une heart, pr ' Atiments, starts the cireuls t the My mata Obese 8, bei ——$_—______— | #motions, and sbove ali he VANITY! Nothing will k women oo young in spirit ae a brand Hew Mirtation oF " ye uline Puriong®’ the whole sent system. ive t one best beautifier “Hut why « summer flirtation? pleaded the Hache Wouldnt « utume one be just as effectively youthitys ” rejoined the Widow « hatically. Lake winter orn, | they are too—er, hardy. They inst too long. A summer flirtation doesn't in | terfere with your sleep; 4 winter one Usually causes you insomnia, Bummer ‘ flirtations give you an appetite; winter ones take it away, Mummer flirtas tows just pleasantly stimulate you. winter ones get on your nerves, They are too exoiting. Love, to be rejuvenating, sould be taken homegpathieally jin Haht quantities often. Too much of it is apt to leave you feeling | Hike ‘the morning after.” commented the Bachelor, with a shrug "You all about both—er, methods. Personally | in witting Im the moonlight holding a f | sentimental nonsense.” |___ “Then why are you so fond of doing it?" demanded the Widow, re | proachtully. “On, Just for—er, for relaxation.” stammered the Hachelor “Ot course!” ay od the Widow, with a emile of tridmplh “lt relames ‘the mind. After one has been talking ‘isms’ or business of polition all | winter, it’s @ mental gat just to talk nonsense and buby-taik, After one haw been strugeling with art or dressmakers or social prov + New Thought | or charity bazaars for eight long months one needs just to lle back and let one's nowe get freckled and one's woul get aunned and aired, And, oh, one | DOES tong for the fleah “The flesh pote of the spirit,” repeated the Bachelor. “Isn't {hat « paras dox?” it THE RIGHT ARGUMENTS. WO big railroads report better business this year Lian last. ‘Lhe Penusyivania's vet income for the first eigit months of 141d shows an increase of $5,262,000 over the corresponding period im v14. For the same months the New York Central reports @ vet gain of 66,572,000. Total operating revenues of both roads for Au-| gest ere well in advance of figures for the same month last yer Bhippers on the Great Lakes are getting bigger cargoes of grain and ore than they can handle and freight rates are going up. | The steel trade, which shares with the railroads the distinction of m to know I never found anything ‘stimulating’ / hand ond talking! lish young thing's chief prosperity indicator, is tov overrushed to talk about itself, Piits burgh banks declare that the October payrolls for industries in that ection will amount to $32,000,000— more than $1,000,000 a day, Farmers in the West will market crops estimated by James J. Hill to be worth $10,000,000,000. ‘The South, if we may believe Kd. tor Edmonds of the Manufacturers’ Record, hasn't seen the promise of such good times since the recovery from the panic of 1907. The fron and steel industry is crowded. Cotton mills are enlarging their plants. This year’s cotton crop, together with the surplus from list year, is being absorbed at advancing prices. Cities along the Atlantic T" Widow abrugged hes shadow eee seaboard and the Gulf are spending big sums on improving their port : : k this Pisteee HALL OOK te wont aoclnatiag Seman Tn ha weslae ” facilities. And, with « grain crop 346,000,000 bushels over that of last f ‘ t “But you knew that already, didn't you?” protested the Bachelor. year, the South has convinced itself that there is profit in something “L knew what watermelon and green corn tasted like,” Inughed the besides cotton. Widow, “but that wasn’t equivalent to awailowing them.” “Oh! Then you DID swallow the perfectly obvious—truth about your- E While Wall Street goes mad over war stocks it is reassuring +o self?” murmured the Bachelor. * mote that real values are accruing to the country elsewhere. We are | ooking for a confidence campaign to boom prosperity. It will start } How to Take the “Heart Cure.” f) RRA AR AAR RRA RARER POPOL DODD ODDO D DDD PDDDD OD “Certainly, Mr. Weatherby! What's the use of taking a ‘cure’ if you don’t take it in good faith? And one man,” she continued, “told me that I 4 had the smallest hand he had ever—ever seen! x arguments drawn from facts like the foregoing, not from thz| |’ , ‘ “And another insisted that my eyes were twin sapphires, and most of | theker. them swore that I didn't look a day over nineteen, and”—— “And it all—worked!" broke in the Bachelor, desperately. “Like a charm or mental ecience or psycotherapy or hypnotism!" de- clared the Widow joyfully, ‘1 feel like a debutante again every autumn.’ “ . “Glorious!” exclaimed the Bachelor, bitterly, “I wonder what THEY | Want a Position Which Will Not Interfe With My Social Duti feel ike?” he added, with a cynical laugh. “They? Who? inquired the Widow innocently. 5 ~ rs “The poor chaps who got dents in their hearts and shocks to their The Week’s Wash The Jarr Family egotiam eerving as a tonic to your vanity.” “Oh, they didn’t mind it!" gurgied the Widow reassuringly. “They ——By Martin Green —— By Roy L. McCardell A TAX DREAM. HE proposed tenfold increase in personal property tax valuatioa is one of those hectic exhibitions of municipal finance which delude the city into thinking it can evade the consequences of past extravagance. Nobody believes for a moment that assessments on $3,700,000,000 ‘of personalty can ever be collected ; $352,051,755 was the total charged were taking the heart cure too you know.” “No, I didn’t know," snapped the Bachelor, “And anyway, flirtation is a game at which only the ‘game’ should play. what makes it worth the candle," finished the Widow positively, Copyright, 1015, by the Prom Publishing Co, (The New York Hveaing World) ‘ Copyright, 1015, by the Pres Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). to personalty last year, and up to Aug. 15 last not two-thirds of the| ¢«' HAT part of the five hun-)were reduced to borrowing car tare | ¢ 6 iY moaned Mrs, Jarr, ber colffure, “Oh! she cried again, Dollars and Sense ‘expected $6,622,000 levy on that total had been collected. dred million dollar ee m a year ago and are now gathering the I’m sure I don't deserve "It Is another gray hair, And it isn't the allies are you going to| kale so rapidly they can't begin to it" — natural for members of my family “ The random methods of assigning personal taxes are notorious. | take up?” asked the head polisher. |apend it. We mest those people, but She was looking in|tO get prematurely gray, either.” By H. J. Barrett. ; * Assessments on individuals are made by guesswork and notices sent| “If they were issuing bonds in two- We don't meet the poor simps that! yee mirror and the reflection she had| Then she sighed and added, “Ob, well, Copyright, 1918, by the Frese Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), ‘out by the thousands on the mere chance that the recipients will ad:v't| Dt denominations I might invest Im 4)! os 16 though it would be im. | beheld had been most satistying up What Young Blood Accomplished in| trent: they were no longer needed 1p the rug section. " couple for decorative purpose: 1 “Oh, "i : their diabilities and pay. Last year 3,000 of theso tax bills proved to|piiea the laundr ic Possible to loge in this market, doesn’t | until this instant, For Mr. Jarr,| | "Oh say not sol’ ventured Mr “Now about the men's clothing de: plied the laundry man. “Inasmuch it? But th 1 Jarr. It bi the Bx This Department Store. 5 ! ut there are more losers than by, waiting for a . “If trouble was the physical fe ‘have been sent to persons who had gone out of business and moved| the smallest denomination i» $100, I'®) winners. And when the big blow-off Who wee idling’ by s “No then,” reflected Willlam Cin Hon wasn momien cies ty drawer |®nd pathological cause of gray hair four, ‘The suits are piled up ot . aa comes and the bottom. dro} chance to frisk the top bureau Benham, aged twenty-four, z out of town. barred, and 1 wouldn't Invest my | ere a ridae Will Dem pebuine|to find an unapotted necktie, had | would look like Hdwin Markham fas, he reported for duty| tables. Not only doos it moan end- ” less labor in displaying goods, but it resort for jumping purposes.” geen her smiling at herself. and Hiram Maxim, Mond, r t Rheinhold- . ev What this huge valuation will do is to make possible a tax rate| dred or many times that sum. rs a vatmatter?" asked Mr. Jarr, “atiok| Mra, Jarr paid no attention to his. y morning ai wrinkles the sults. We want long i it di tment ith ch t lower than that taxpayers have been told they must expect. For this| “Bankers say it ts @ good Invest) 3 Just a Chance, {|e pin in youresier" If teouble brought @ray balr Grey | cece ia tes cocaumenive ob 0 FOme Of WDIAE Win nek oe es banger. It requires leas eed by © stores in the conservative old city of! on & coat ® pleasant surprise the present administration wi ment because it is guarant enatenamannanetattaranante ‘This was an {dle question. Women| alr makes more trouble and that| siaywood, “bere I've Kot a job space; the suits display themselves; P ill no doubt claim) prance and England and pays 64] ¢¢7 SEE,” said the head polish may thrust a thousand pins all over|™eans more gray hair. 2 > 88) Joas time is required and the suits are ghd Whatever part of the amazing levy proves uncollectable can| per cent. They iedow thelr Dusinesa, that they have started a wey rparel and never atick them. | “Pull it out If it worries you," Bote. man with she nates, It's a] Kept in better, condition handed on—a burden to be borne by future budgets. those bankers, But if you pay due chase mummies. USING TABL in penology at Columbia Uni-} seives once, while a man may try to|Counselled Mr. Jarr, Will the Board of Estimate approve this airy echeme? money in the loan if I had the bun- Probably they're following inethods| Number of | customers. attention to developments you willl versity,” “But they eay if you pull out ene|im vogue in Millard Filimore’s ad-|~ served by clerk In 4% note that as soon ax the details of! “Probably,” suggested t manipuiase: che Breas ‘pis: And: eek you pull out one) Tinistration, Backed by my six| hours .. ’ ai Kkested the Iaundry | himself a thousand times, gray hair three more gray bairs will ‘ “ = an i, a a the loan are completed the bankers! man, “when Warden Osborne gete all| Mmselt® thousand times, | | eomne tm ite place.” ra’ expeciene with tho livest de: |‘rotal Auies. reise gy Ag {it proceed to unload It on the pub-| his plans working there will be an ex- seg h oare TE ne vay don't balan. th | REL sere, 18 Bee ke I) Average time per sain... 8% minul be Change of professors hetween Golums-|Wae facing the mirror, her hands| “You don’t belle’ that, do yout"| should be able to show them a few) USING RACKS. THE MOVIE TRUST DISSOLVED. Me. Park | Blt and Sing Sin, imaking half hearted gestures toward | ®8ked Mr. Jarr, ne. Number of — customers : ° “Ae far on eecurity woes, | ee = — “Of course I do," was the reply.| “Mr, Rheinhoid,” wai¢ Benham one; S°rved by clerk In ¢is “ . d the park syste! is ei . ‘ ours. | HE Government won a clean cut victory over the so-called Mov-| Parte vie" provably. sliticient to aay | i ~ Rvecybody knows it 1s true" | day, sete. State fomething around) wotat naien. $273 by ‘, * 3 Sag fothing of the houses of Parllame: Th S 5 0 boss,” na! es tye} Average time per sale.....14 minutes ing Picture Trust by a decision of the United States District|2°U'the Grand Opora House, but thery e Uu way nop Mr. Jarr. “He's spending oodles of | Beds! om at, frst: thea when we've] Averige tims, per tetra came in Fabia f Court at Philadelphia. Asa result, film companies represent. | happens to be « large and violent, war money on hair restorers, scalp mas-|open up. Just atep into 1.0 rug de-|stccession, The management gave young Rheinhold carte blanche and he, in turn, was coustantly tn con- curiously from a{ suitation with Henham. The shelves } su i ing millions of dollars must dissolve a combination alleged to have on, Just at this time, Oe et to discoura, and all that sort of thing. He'd —== By Sophie Irene Loeb le been formed as far back as 1908 for the purpose of controlling the |" ears tof [sive me op snatense of alery if | “Bive years from now Bngland and Congright, 1918, by the Prem Pubiishing Co. (The New York Evening World) could teil him something that would ey entered, for shirts in the haberdashery de- production of films and moving picture machines throughout the coun- France will be called on te pay that Wan is an sapway. Two poeee tnjustioe of itt ie there is|increase his bair, He has just al ‘See those rugs, piled one top| partinent, for instance, were equipped s . . a . atylis! m of ua y 4 i) din pottoms, us en hy try and even dictating terms to theatres that use these products, ea they, will have the, ino ey, May- vilshly dressed = women |iindness should flow freely it in ia | cow stay ones. fo Tam going to tell| of the other? Every time @ cus-| with . bry pia 3 " they will, but for e the “The end and purpose of the plan,” declares the court, “was to| tion that the little old savings bank a 2 ot th one motion to pull out realina- sut opposite me, occupying \the crowded. subwa him to pull out one—then th 1 | tomer enters, the clerks have to la-|the clerk wi ythe vehicle en three will 4 mare the entire contents of each compart- nae bank at least three aeats in order |that carries the millions to and from |come In its place. Beriqualy spread all these rugs out) ie fh e4 Cisne le ‘ {a within reach » more satisfactory dominate and control the trade in all the accessories of the art, and, in| tah un additional 2 per cent. ‘order to assure this, to control the entire motion picture business.” business ambi- | > the war, to face each other to carry | thelr labor, He can keep up|on the floor. Then they're piled up| ment for quick inspection. In the “Suppose Germany wins the war! enture to say that | this plan of intensive dry farming of} again. Here's the way we handled | dress goods « Its of cloth on their conversation, A tired work- |these two women who insisted on re- i t VYolman Grant's,” and pointing| Which had previously been arranged will ermany wins the war ling xirt came in and hung to a strap taining even more than their “right” | (20 hair until hia whole pate is cov. | Ht ft 4 tee. # 3 whe permit Engla A “lin front of these two women, She A clear case for the Sherman Anti-Trust Law. The public ix| to pay us five hundred million dollars? | jooxod so wan and weary that even A swskened i the oioraing aonid | Sed, With thick, Iuauriane Coven it] ntaP he erred, he handed the mage ee asker with but one oaks sb Jude to grab that tiv Eee oe hha the pro. | sray) locks until be looks tke the Rip| azine to young Rheinhold, . ay) | Or will she conc! , ? | the h box she carried seemed too he day had been one of| Vv y a aepandic ie ‘lavical lab t to be reminded that that formidable instrument of justice is still | }inired million for herself? On tho|{he junen Box ene anctod ener wow [seeking ‘elf-satisfaction; while sho| Vat winkl® Of the wholewale woollen | | OH Ge. pe loots’ cael Reine | here egret partment to a bolt, Not only did this smoothly. whole, 1 think Ti let the bankers) the gir, All “day long, she stood on Whom they had made stand by" their Lee ; wall like doers,” s8id Rhein; | Here, Woe eee ee aad cht the loan, rT platform near the ceiling, ty- el ad contributed to the , dor nonsense!" snappe ¥ . . ‘ined eo old re of th It fs also interesting to learn that the movies some time ago at- Uthat the, loan te, to, be tng Up, boxen, ehe ‘ [nupport of a tamity ‘and thus to the | Mrs. Jar. Bfepar meruods, NU RRORH tO EBtNOr | TnI UN oad bye oongwelen et el 0 r 4d long. | Wo 0 he had pald the same| « ‘ “ " 4 ps facilities duri ahh tained the distinction of tes” and a “ ” made—or that credit ve ane Seep. OF Aa the Geet es ehe looked iprioe as they for hor ride ‘And I've ot another idea! Two weeks Inter saw the installa- | 93 facilities during | ru ours, | possessing “magna a “trust.” So) five hundred million dollars is to be ox-|ingly at the p naibie. ry 18 ont of seiitigh te the cat acne ind 4s] chortied Mr. Jur, “If the scheme tation of the racks in the faco of Staf-| Thin loss in x month's time amounta faz this great amusement industry has soomed singularly impersonal, | 2404 "0 the Alllcs “shows how fool | her, but the Ite lish and futile was the opposition |so spread them: managers are little known, only one or two of its producers ever yt their American al have their names before the public, and we have yet to hear of a| money in th POnEY swaying girl meant nothing to Shana, [72 Be ho Ene every-day human Ld against & war, they have Finally she timidly ventured: # or her mite toward all “motion picture ” Will the enforcement of the Sherman Law| iie"\"wnance.’ The argument that| “Won't you kindly, move up @|Viating the conditions that oxiat for the loan will prolong the war doesn't | \ittle? those who can tolerate it loast ‘ord’ . Three clerks} to an tncaleulable sum in a modern ven over the apace (DOr. Of course the answer in: “Why |silccessful with the bona I'll take it | fords horrified provents titer citte | te nt atore, nly Impressed with | doesn't the company furnish enougr | up with John D, Rockefelle: | their own. interests that the tired, #eats?” But it doesn’t, Th nar ro-Germans and/and were #0 di If people with Now |that young John D, te» in Colorado getting his picture taken for the! the old home? Im it, can it be aladvice, If you always give advice newspapers at the mines a fellow! Circassian princess? And the grate-| you never impair your own capital.” bring out the men behind the movies? Lake Division), one atom of steam could plainly see our ears, as we tried to oindered air, I saw one Dawe and use it as a chest protector or apron, or trousere-leg-reinforcer, until he waa quite sheathed aeked him why, He said: ‘I'd be laughed at than Ranamsaia, o Se ae rmest wrapping of ita earth, And we need all thi warmth we oan get on this North of the Erie, where the steam has been turned off since spring,” mention the fact of re value as a it of other Erie pate be cola| Wall Street,” admitted the laundry CLAIVERS Ja, ro. Suppose it does prolong the ae Ie tant Our . We didn't Mare at, And if we should get into |" a war in the future it might come tn quite handy if England and France— provided they survive the present | Bonfilct—oome to the front with a loan at a time when it {s needed.” ———_—_—_—_—_—a—ea=—e—eePrrr™*”—_ s The Golden Shoestring. Ree “ HAT’A the use in investing W money at 5% per cent., anyhow," asked the head polisher, “when you can go down in Wall Btreet with some loose change rette coupons and win 1] an automobile before lunch time?” and a few ol “They're certainty cleaning up in She must hi @ been very, very, red. “We can't crush each other,” one woman answered, deflantly; and the other’s head went up in the air with fe sweeping Mianoe thal pisinly said: “How dare you!" But they made no attempt to move, An old gentleman near by, seeing the situation, sald: “You can't occupy three places. Move up nent.” The man's voice wan authoritative, No doubt he was a father, One of the women “moved up" two or thri tnohes. The girl tried to squeege into other sido of her, and she had to alt well forward or be forced out entirely, Had these two women wished, they could easily have made room and saved suffering of the young woman man, “L mest mem newaduye wholes tae end of ber hard day, d give this young girl a Consideration Is the keynote of civ- {ization, Oh, the sorrow and sadness that could be saved if each would play his little part toward preventing discomfort. Hundreds of peuple Lraveiling in the subways in their thoughtlessness as- sume reclining positions while read. | ing oF conversing, without regard to those about them. Even a Ilttle crowding wouldn't hurt them. A little courtesy constantly practised would make them better men and women and happier, too, in the long run. ‘The burrying-scurrying attitude of \metting firet and best places is the the apace, crowding the person on the | one element at creates distrust and puts treachery in the hoart of those whom you seek to supplant, Possession may be nine pointa of the law, but it ts ninety-one of your worth when you give up something te help somebody. may have & chance to get next to the old man, and If the old gentleman has one gray hair left on his dear old bald bean we can pull it out and three more wil) come tn its place, and then we can pull out one of the three and then there will be five, and we pull out one of the five and then there will be eight, and then we pull out one of the eight, and then the old man will have eleven, and so on, until when young John D. makes his last speech to the men tn Col- orado, saying ‘Back to the mines, there'll be no strike to-day!’ and re- turns home, his venerable and ox- tremely well-to-do parent will stiok his head out of the front window to weloome him and young John D, will pay, ‘Who can that be visiting at ful old milllonaire will shed a tear of! But Mrs. Jarr gave a glad cry. * joy and cry, ‘Don't you know me, my| isn't a gray hair after all!” she ex- thrifty, nifty boy? It is I, your|claimed; “it's a white silk raveMing parent, with his hair all restored by) that got in my hair, But you would Edward Je infallible ave hair dry farming’!” gray, wouldn't you “['m sure you are talking very) “Why, of course,” replied Mr. Jarr, foolish,” said Mrs, Jarr. “But if it} and he k or. fe true, and everybody says it is,| “Still, you imight go and see old that three gray hairs will come in| Mr. Rockefeller and try your Idea,” when you pull out one, the idea! remarked Mrs. Jarre, “If it didn't might be very good. “What do you, do any good it wouldn't do any think old Mr. Rockefeller would give. harm, and even If he only did give m of! love me just the you if you advised him? you advice, I'm sure his advice te “He would pay in kind,” said Mr. very valuable.” It 1 advised him how to save! “Advice doesn't pay Interest,” re lied Mr, dart “If anybody wants a nh of hair to the head through ing out any single one he might have) Met ldward Jarr dry hair farming lett, he would advise me to save my| pian lot him pay for it!” And there money—that is what he always gives,|the matter rests.

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