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ning World Daily Dai Magazine. Saturday, February 26, 1916 By J. H. Cassel yt 18, Tip Frese Pullin New Fore brening Word.) iThe Woman of It. By Helen Rowland. 1916, by The Prom Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), She Says Love Is Merely a Point of View. ‘ T'S funny!" remarked the Bachelor, gazing after a girl in yole low tulle, as he and the Widow glided rhythmically out on the polished floor, “I thought that girl stunnihg, in a green sweat- er, on the ice, this afternoon; but to-night, under the elee- trics, she looks—well, awfully commoriplace!* “It's all in the point of view,” cooed the Widow cheerfully, “What's all in the point of view?" demanded the Bache! | “A woman's attraction,” explained the Widow, “That's why it's 80 BSTABLIGHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. biteh Nos 68 Peed Detly Becent Gunter v7 tne Frese fe ing Company, Nos. 68 to LPH Presid 8 Park Row, MANOUS SHAW. ton¢8 Park Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr., Secretary, 63 Park Row. Becon4-Clase Matter. se vening |For Engian and the Cominent and All Countries in the International Postal Unti . Entered at the Rates to 66 ‘Worla for the United States and Canada. o MOTOR. «+ aes meses ee se eeeee ee WOLUME 56.....ceeeeceeeneeesccceceesoessees NO, 19,018 NO LIMIT? HE Wastmau Kodak Company issues a bulletin warning pro-' ducers of photographic supplies to husband their material with utmost economy. Chemicals and other products necessary to dificult for a man to decide whether or not he is in love with a girl. Every’ time he looks at her from a different angle or sees her in a different light, or through the mist of a different mood, he cl his mind.” “And yet,” protested the Bachelor, us to marry one of this industry, becanse of the enormous demand for them in other directions created by the war, are rapidly getting beyond readh—in price and quantity obtainable. Here is one more instance of the alarming effect upon many in- dustries in this country produced by European markets where uncon- trolled extortion is now allowed free play. What is to become of American manufacturers if they have to buy the commonest materials | #t prices constantly advanced by the feverish demands of war? Take the ordinary metals used in a thousand ways. Copper @aght to be 16 cente a pound. But since Europe will now pay from 97 to 29 cents for it manufacturers in this country who have to have copper are expected to accept the higher figures as the market priee. fino fe one of the commonest metals. Yet it is selling around 50 eeuts a pound, three times its usual cost. Even the humble lead has Smoreased in price more than 50 per cent. Again, the price of common, everyday blotting paper has gone up amazingly. Why? Because blotting paper is made from cotton , age and the du Pont Powder Company is bidding for all the cotton rags in sight at 9 cents per pound. These soaring war prices may mean profit for the few. But what about the many for whom they only mean that ordinary articles cost more and more because the prices of materials essential to their production are boosted ever higher? Holland, facing a similar problem, has attempted, at least, to solve it. The Dutch Government allows Dutch producers and manu- facturers to dispose of 40 per cent. of their products to foreign cus- tomers at any price they can get. The remaining 60 per cent. must) be sold at home at standard prices. | The United States cannot afford io ignore injustice either to its} industries or to its millions of consumers. | It is the desperate demand of Europe against the healthy demand of this country. It is the extravagance of colossal destruction against the normal needs and resources of thrifty producers. Ts there to be no protection for the latter? | them, and go on admiring and adoring her forever “You could,” announced the Widow coolly, “if you would get the right perspective on her—and keep it! From the right perspective, almost any woman is eternally charming.” “Humph!" grumbled the Bachelor, “but in matrimony you don't get any perspective at all!” Brrr i } § A Bit of Marital Anarchy. o——~rrrrrrrmomo—o——OOOOOoOO™Ool™OOOOO™mrm™"™"09— | 667 KNOW It!” sighed the Widow, “It takes a little distance to lund en- I chantment to anything, even a husband or wife; and most husbands and wives refuse to allow one another an inch of distance. They go through life as a near-sighted person goes through an art gallery, with their eyes glued right up against the picture, where they can see all the flaws and mechanism, and ghastly details, but miss all the charm, the symbolism, and the illusion of the tout ensembie. Ugh! There are times when one feels almost ike TEARING them apart!" and the Widow's pretty contemptuously. exglaimed the Bachelor, “that sounds like anarchy!” “It's not!” declared the Widow. “It's just charity. It's a safe wager that if you could simply manage to separate them for a few months, and let them Watch one another from a distance and from a different angle, nine out of ten of the most miserable, quarrelsome married couples would fly back to one another's arms again and live happily—well, not forever, but for a long, long time, afterward. Most people are eimply too much married!” “What!” exclaimed the Bachelor in shocked tones, “IT mean exactly that,” repeated the Widow firmly, "TOO MUCH MAR« RIED! , “Bravo!” cried the Bachelor softly. “Now if one could be married Uttle bit, or ‘now and then,’ or ‘occasionally,’ how perfectly lovely”—— “But once married,” broke in the Widow, “we are married every day, and all day, forever and ever! That's the tragic thing about matrimony; its eternal, harrowing permanence. After the first dalliance of the honeys moon has worn off the average pair simply immerse themselves in matri+« mony until they almost forget about love and romance, and even about one another, except as the necessary adjuncts to matrimony. They make gods of all the ttle daily commonplaces, and conventions, and routine of matrimony, and allow the horrid little mechanical duties and trials ote |to draw them closer and closer into the net until they are so wound up that it takes t divoree court to cut them ou! “Whee-ew whistled the Bachelor softly, “but what would you bave do? Take a flying leap out of it every now and then?” “Yes,” returned the Widow, “or at least unwind themselves from it occasionally and get far enough away from one another to find a new perspective, and a new viewpoint. “And a new enehantment?’ put in the Bachelor facetiously, 4 * { Be Married—But Not Too Much! 3 wy. “cc SRHAPS," admitted the Widow grudgingly, “nothing makes one ap4 | preciate an old shoe like trying on a new one; and nothing makes THE HIGHER. POLITICS. | one appreciate an old love lke a new flirtation, And you can 4 safely wager that if they were truly mated they'd come flying back to jono another again quickly enough, with all’the old enthusiasm and romance ,and povelty and illusions! If a man could just view his own wife from across the ballroom or the restaurant occasionally, he would be astonished |to discover how attractive she is. It's always the woman at the other end of the room, or the picture on the opposite wall, you know, that looks most fascinating.’ And a wife at a distance is worth two in the kitchen! Pro- pinquity is the cu of matrimony and the surest cure for love. Why, if } you turn a magnifying g' on a diamond it looks like nothing but a cheap piece of window-glass, how can you expect a woman or a man to appear bri 1 X-ray of matrimon: “Amen! “but just think w T WAS a sound lesson in tactics that Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt read to the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage. | Don’t pitch into the Democratic Party because it failed to put through a Suffrage amendment, Mrs. Catt warned the belligerent- ly inclined union. “The only way to win in the thirty-six States mecessary for the ratification of a Federal amendment is to be good friends with both parties.” Right. Unless Suffrage wishes to play into the hands of its cne- The Week’s Wash —-By Martin Green --- So t and alluring in the ete The Jarr Family —- By Roy L. McCardell —— Bachelor murmured the lot of time : bs Fae ee ae oe eG aan NaNtane for new Hawpelilnr Why: w/emD ROU mies it will never allow itself to become a party issue or descend to ear shee: Wiaws Vien re were wes cenenen Sere nen rey eee hemes Tee be Seer enc Seeerene Covi Tien Stn btoneee, West: |be kept so busy studying his wife that he wouldn't have any timt left for hy 5 i Aas 66 TC ROM this distance,” remarked his mind the idea that the could get|¢¢ PLEASE, will you let me have| upset that my memory ts totally | pisinems,” slambang abuse and threats in an effort to make a noise like mascu- the head polisher, “it appears (he soldiers fighting in Europe out of a dollar?” asked Mr. Jarr! gone!” Baeeshe i I AAW PRRUY« bi thas Baohatove lea: Tee it sti the trenches by Christmas. Love,” answered the Widow gently, as the Bachelor led ‘ Hine politics. that President Wilson is going ‘ord hasn't 4 ' humbly the last day of the} “Maybe it's under the mattress,”!tne maze of dancers back to the dimly lit conservatory, “is the to win out over the anembers of Con Ce ani mame ce BOCES. 1 Mr. J life! And no t t in Keeping it alive is wasted “ ” “ | over the ane > tary of War or the Secretary of the | Week. said Mr, Jarr. ife! And no time or energy spent in keeping it alive is wasted, "Take my word, oe ere os it 1s a great deal easier | greas who conceived the idea that it Navy for any facts about the neces-| Mrs. Jarr crossed the room like | “Listen to that man!” cried Mra, money or fame or success away from life’ and you sill have hope, dreams, to get © man along with suger than with vinegar | Waa up to them to dletate the foreign | sity for defending ourselves against |tragedy queen, fumbled under @ lacey Jarr, “You will drive m6 wild! Now Illusions, beauty, love, romance left, But take LOVE away—and what have Right again. The more the Suffragists are guided hy that truth, “In tho judgment of many members | suliod the generals and admitals who |P¥Feau cover, brought out @ { | Sut koscabiow iouoaiere) Mra cate | YeulmetTy | 1 242 oa chanoalte love. aaweredaite Bae the faster the whole procession will move. { of Congress," said the laundry man, | have made ‘th yitrenetled Geter | obs s bureau draw ts, search | ete the aires end thera ¥ is the clor promplly, with true masculine, optimism, "but yoy do look stunning 1a | J a cu {the country ir . Hel under some chemises and other con- { poe! 00k: st to show you, i (hg de sgt pices } Sluded @ : e | hasn" rie \ © added hastily, “in fact you look wonderful in any light and RET Rie EE eS nation included within the; hasn't talked with diplomats and a cena ty exclama- | here, anc oul ought of it | ths he’ be | Doundaries of the district they repre: | travellers who have lived in: forcieg {dential garments, gave an exclama-| here, and I would bave thought of I s:om every angle—to-night it TTALLED IN THE SUBW. sent, They are incapable of realizing |lands and know something about | tion of impatience and said: “Where|in a minute if you hadn't got me so a arery OORT eutiecsd. the Widow sweetly, ‘your ‘perambotive’ STA AY. that they aro part of a ayatent apy Qiner peoples “Uiink of “us He! did I put my pocketbook? j upset, W hy hee it ts, ners I al-| perfect!” ee ay OMAInbne + ‘ 0 only one side of the case—his| “Didn't you put it under the mate|ways put it! How much do you) 4 3 cit: fi ies " > _| ple. AN they think about is the) side--and he has never tried t pe infer: . sociale | HE city suffered a bad traffic tic up yesterday when the sub-| Ginptiath Missouri! or the Umeteenth | the other side ‘Arguinenta based on | Tess?” inferrogated Mr. Jarr. _ | want? , |How Gardeners May Now Defy Jack Frost. way between the Grand Ceniral Station and Ninety-sixth Texas or whatever particular vection |hai¢ knowledge and voiced by money| “No, 1 did not: 1 put it in SUE | GHEE OSHRE WHE CF emit SHEE: | E dneantion (Hay whowle th is of commutera 23 + a . of the country which sheiters the/are not likely to get very far.” drawer not ten minutes » because } Jarr. ERE ts a new invention that should rejoice the souls of comm! Street went out of business for four or five hours, with con- Voters who sent them to Washington, tens I tain ll the laundryman ‘came Ac dollat==here) but) you Bice. | ‘and other garden makers, discomfort because of the weather. of a doubt that he is a statesman, . ® have the change. So I put it right|Mrs, Jarr, “You had $20 yesterday!” = ee OO There are as many fathea 166 sald the head polish on ‘ — Individual cup-like Floods in the subway at Broadway und Forty-second Street are | National Lagisiatute ga (here Gov, Whitman ve "hee back here in ¢ins d | “And T gave it to you" sald Mn) ‘ | covers pressed inte ; Thy be lt »/ " - lany body of men of like size confers h¢ “ “Oh, my poor he: WHAT did 1) shape from bianks Nothing new. This one was made more serious by a break in a drainage jcuously assembled anywhere, ntorring with George W. Per- 4 F sketbook? I} And then take {t away from me disks made of @ pe in the B. RT ; ¥ ‘ T doks the fact that h wan is, Bren | Kin do with! she. Ban ea fes 1 vhat do | flexibl pipe in the B. R. T. excavation at Forty-sixth Street. Thousands cf | geet (2, SP Resa Bey aa “Well,” replied the law Just # minute ago! But I do declare /asain,” replicd Mrs. Jarr, “What do light, flexible mi Severs were held up anywhere from half an hour to an hour and Re posi gh ete ot “ihe [Mr F “still has a eon I'm so bothered and worried and you give me money for if you are terial = which = i@ : ; Spey . and) country underneath his hat. But + — eee — = | going to take it all away from me the waterproof. ‘ The ope a half in stalled trains. Wocal trains drew together and permitted |there is this to say for him: Hel@ next minute? And I don’t see what eration of eetting ' [doesn't have to think about what the e Sucta dallas toe sduat for them in place 4s ‘ passengers to walk through to the nearest stations. poople of any particular little political We i h t a n d Wo r r thal TRA S hole ! wt nd alsa stele ween ry : vi : silitien _|division of the United states ar: carfare a D e whicl) requires but . But the tie-up demonstrated anew the lack of facilities for get Boing to say about his actions. 4 : , town shopping and buy things for Hale tance, ae ~ ting people out of stalled express trains. In this case there was no Mt hay been sitting -—-By Sophie Irene Loeb --- everybody in this house ang not spend are first laid ovew darkness or smoke to start a panic. But if rumors of disaster or fire feeling it Be for almost rt . “la dollar—no, not a half dollar, eve’ and feeling its pulse for almost n teen months. the plants and thew bottom edges then Couyrght, 1016, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World), He has been right on had spread through the crowded cars there might have been serious “1 like to have @ little money with J y ble thing, this attribute in man is the job every minute. Members of URING the week a prominent, t! , * gaid Mt. Ji “put for good- pressed into the a ve vay Yash- a or .!none the less deplorable, and harder |™¢- Mr. Jarr, rz results. fonsreas Save hoes away trom Waet woman sued her doctor- ii, deal with. He usually regards hin-|ness sake let me have it if you are loose earth, by means i ington @ great deal of the time, many |} husband for separation, Bhe |'0, deal with. , He usually regards bin: | ide of a hend implement, Whenever subway trains are halted for more than a few minutes | of Tne SENS 98. copmuntsies i advanced a new reason for | therefore thinks he has the right ‘to |S01ns tot <i and held securely. d c atest war in history is a fagres . . : " © get so many things to- two things should be promptly done: with only faint interest. It the action, She alloges that PEAY Peo - EE vias l'dag tyre phe Tee inet lik ey par d a ‘ ting to note that some whe lias been losing weight at more {* i OO OUEFRROSS TAAL. CHUNG | CRys seasahe Foaepdidan tr igie! * together, it (1) The reason for the prolonged stop should he transmitted to|the gentlemen most active in opp than two pounds ‘4 pes oy She lost | {2°, ruraoient cy ane break the! 1 might have known that,when I did can distribute an@ A ‘ ; feealae bk “a @ 8 eck, realt y and bra: ow casy | 4 : . { all trains and the guards instructed to inform and reassure passengers, |{RS {he President's Polley represent ecurteen pourda, ‘Then ahe eourht w{ le mould bere etoe chain ie ane wonia| nave ® little money for myssit you anchor as ral {2) In view of the lack of exits to the street and the danger of the} World-wide activities, A newspaper |remedy, claiming that her husband AL a See eee oI an Bet wale em bs oy! ed Lon - A 4 yey es Tg a . 4 . ; ge 3 na : |poll of the free. and untrammelled 3 “so cruel” as t he cause of | Gonnectic ia mone BP me, ‘omember, you've got to . third rail every express train should be equipped with bridges and|olectorate of a Congressional district |qtath eo De te cause 0 ee inaias Bee pay me this dollar back this even- mage of 68 Rarely i iS MSuthern Mikia navanlea tha on't insist on ye husband set. | PAS cent material, the: a reguler system of transfer to local trains and thence to nearby|many of said free and untrammelted | 't may be proved that her conten- |tting the disputes between you aud) !Me ae replied | care for the young fect i 3 WO i {voters didn't know anything about | tion is correct, There is nothing in{your maid, ; h, all right, all right,” replied | Y aera’ héainy a ee stations effected according to plans worked out in advance and un-| ir var in Hurope.” the wide, wide world that will cause| Refuse to get into an argumeat| Mr. Jarr, hastily. “Let me have tt, In One Section of derstood by all employees. In case of accident under ground the first principle of safety is $0 avert panic by showing the public a quick way to the surface. in mild weather as if the plants were set in greenhouses, By employing them, saya bout the technicalities of his busi- dediine as much es discord and dis- |About tne tert nema not be ta content, | millar, 1 know one little tired woman, the! Don't treat your wife as a school Cerny $ Loquacious Money. $ ne Southwestern, California Thousands of Acres of Plants are Covi y a Hand Implement Please, because I'm late and I haven't a cent.” | “What did you do with your other | 6 HILE we are on the sub-| mother of five children, whose bus- |#ttl laying down rules of living for) money? You lad $4; because 1 saw | jet Con aped Popular Mechanica, fect," said the head pol- p 5 out ‘sbully.” jher. ; Jit." said Mrs, Jarr, suspiciously, Shields in Pla srowth 46 hasteneisp " “4 - Ppa band's title ought to be “bully,’ |" Don't throw away a husband's ad- arr, susp y guarded * Hits From Sharp W its. Isher, “isn't it in order to! He worries the life and soul out of vico as to your dress, unless you are pent it on you. T bought you [consider Henry Ford's campaign of | ner by constant wrangling, until she certain Is taste is Impossib {nice dinner down town last night, PR os, Gave, oh save us from the fellow) We can't Imagine any man being | PUvICNY aKaine. the plan to enters: | is now actually “a rag and a bone and| , Never scold bin alot His estravi- | replied Mr, Jur ° Anil who feels that he must diagram his |s0 cruel as to remind his wife of the| with guns and ammunition?’ | hank of hair,” 1 asked this woman Bane’ ep ory of your own famiy| "ANd why shouldn't you? asked " ttle joke for thone to whom hej days when she used to ve trim and| In tis campaign Just‘lautiched by | What the nature of the quarrels were, /are economical in that direction, Mrs. Jarr, quickly, “Who else should T h ri f t St By Samuel Smiles . pes | Ns one Mr. Ford,” declared the laundry man, | and she answered; Don't refuse to go out to dinner] you spend your money on? You talk naa “{t'twn't Henry Ford who is ¢alking.| “Nothing, nothing at all. with him if he feels inclined to have (By Perminion of Harper & Brothers.) | Half the world doesn't understand| You never heard of @ poor old man Once it is oy Wand’, if you had done me a great favor! i ° It 1s Henry Ford's money which is t the k a change. as ‘ : s how the other half gets along on its) Parrying @ rich young girl—Macon | talking, If Henry Ford didn't have about the Iundryman not returning |4 over be unsympathetic to your| Well, If that's the way you look at it, | P * ee eee fe j see any money whe would probably bel iike a dress one of the children wears, wite’e worries bocause they are trivial don’t ever ask me again! Ob, T could | No, 20—The Uncertain Future. black cloud hangs over each end of ‘dead’ doing his talking to @ knot of war 1 1s just trifles, alway: : | to you. sonia ta hay ie dine i rite jroe| the bridge. A 6 entrance Wren cats in the back yard would], A friend th ‘deed’ tan't one who| buge standing in front of some news: |! anus, 7iaes, always Just trifles.” | |C030% | to servant who will not | Set Plenty of peorle to bly me 4 HB uncertainty of if pro-) there are hidden pitfalls very thickly not ‘be so bad if they could keep in| ands out only hot air.—Philadelphia paper bulletin board, a tale ane that ae Ree - | serve meaia to the husband who must | "0ts !f I was that kind! | verbially true, The stron set, through which throngs disap) fane.—Toledo Blade. Saaulrer, ne P'vead ‘tho history of Mr. Ford | good provider, fullilia all her tmterial |come home late to dinner. N¥OP MUOdAeAE HERG ATO YOU OF are and healthiest man may be|6o ‘soon as they have placed thele ce 8 . from this boyhood up recently, and he | i, ul Yet, accord h If the soup is burned don't serve it] You not going to give me that dol-! os ./oK0n down in a moment by ac-| feet upon the bridge. ‘They grow ics Amicle' Int eamer to Godee|; Garrutous persons could never fol-| has certainly moved in a narrow! hee Wea eae eS ORR wal |iav?" asked Mr. Jarr, despondingly. | acne or disease, If we take humon| Mluner toward the centre; they stad trouble than to fight your way out seaxing. “They would goog berks | groove thus far with an | thou hing, When you ask what | Don't insist on his spending all holl-| “No, 1 at eee ean ee enna fall to| ay, disappear, until at tongth aly Mise ha ti eileal [Drain weary.—Toledo Blade, my fi mn | hineenieeare iia tuner “Tattle | dare ureniber She birthday and the an. | tossing her head. “Not after the Way | recognize the uncertainty of life as| and there also. having. dropped d i we Raat in thatuntaniahar® Se \nivere | you have spoken to me, twitting me SAB ina oantalnits eath,| throua the pitfalls, the bridge at tte soAtter a mun hae tie own way about] Don't make fun of the romances of | his mi enius and sole alWagn Rretern ante hanes eral Ont eoouss your husband of firte| about buying me a dinner! Hore 1a| “uCn Be we do tne certains further extremity: ‘becomes entirely SONS Wad, te looks for Gome cae | call Mouepe love’ resleae INC eras |e Giant broaden any. | He Recps the piace alive with his wonly jing when he has merely been polite (01 the change the Iaundryman gave me, | gree avin at Atlee a elle | eerste diawcrintion, of AdatgoR i « ve" ¢ 8 into affec- | an atmosphere of gusol in-shots, Th is or Wi aS waka, i an ’ corre e results o} else on veda he can put the blame—|tion that lasts u lifetime.—Nebraska | paint until somebuly. kas Pwr, TEA Re MONAT TORR Ree TL eacs\t sow voussaoret | and that’s plenty for you for to-day!” | life is pictured ua a passage over 1| observations made us to the duration k Aabany ‘a. tete Journal, want meinen GOll thd OUCECler aud tunicled 4 Wille a useing Womae 1s tate pide at Lome =... «ad Aw, Jats banded him 49 coat | bridge of about 4 hundred arches, Alof human life t Poem L