The evening world. Newspaper, March 2, 1916, Page 14

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. - as casa ae" The Evening World | | } | Separating the Wheat From the Chaff 8y,J,,H. Cassel Daily Magazine, Thursday, March 2. 1916 Reflections of hi BETABLIGHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Puvitenes Daly Sevens Cenney &7 Sys J Futyenine Company, Nos. 68 to _ REE = wate x A Bachelor Girl Secon4-Claee Matter. Bisa hates tar The itetlag Pot Gadians ani the, Soodnent ant International Postal Union . sos seememevent 6 ee et sovevevenes seveeeeeNO, 19,917 A CALL FOR CONFIDENCE. | OME of those who are still peeping for political motives behind the President's open challenge to Congress had much better be otherwise engaged. | Are we to admit no crisis or issue of importance concerning wrnol| it may be the duty of thie country to think nationally rather than politically? Are we to recognize no problem which must be met with | prompt, single-handed action on the part of the Executive rather than | with the extended partisan questionings and cavillings which Congress | might prefer to bring to it? | By Helen Rowland teen's 1010, ty The Press Pubtidhtng Oo, (The New York Brening World). . 1 E Great Domestic Question: “What do you want with ANOTHER e | I hat?” i} jOne Year... 0! One Month... —, When a husband-won't listen to persuasion, Dearie, it {s sometimes sign that he is Hatening to some other woman’s persuasions. Why does @ man always say, “You are the first woman I ever really loved"? Well—perhaps because it costs no more and is a lot easier to say than, “You are the twenty-first!” Many, many times the storms of married life drive a man on to Bud- cess, when the dead calm of domestic bliss would have left him forever in backwater. f ‘The woman who oan hold @ man’s love forever is the one who cares | Just enough to respond when he és fnterested, and not enough to be in- ‘terested when he doesn’t respond . \ ‘ The question how Germany is going (o treat armed merchant) Se) “ . “ Now that our skirts and dur sleeves are #0 frankly retrousse, a girl * vessels may be answered at any moment in a way that will call for in-! . has ‘to be awfully brave and independent, in the face of suspicion, to dare to dress modestly. a stent rejoinder in words that must express the ultimate will of this nation. March 1 is past. German submarines are already at work. Tf occasion arises it is the President who will have to speak for the nation, not Congress, Is it any wonder that he wislied to remove once and for all from fo 1 tninds the delusion that Congress could be counted upon to take the decision out of his hands? When British Ministers are handling negotiations the intricacies: eet : of which they alone are in a position to follow, it is a habit of Parlia : ie <a |___ A plot of people get divorces for “Incompatibility” when the real yment, as The Evening World took occasion to remark some days ago, | 4 " ‘ ‘ | srounds for the petition were nothing but “monotony. to aid the Government with a simple vote of confidence. | . f The House of Representatives appears to have about made up its/ mind that so far as the armed liner controversy is concerned a resolu- tion of this sort is exactly what it owes the President. The country will be glad to see the Senate talk itself as briefly as may be to the A man’s “repentance” {s sometimes ust the mild enjoyment he takes | in going over his sine In retrospection, when he ts too old, too busy, or too much married to repeat them otherwise. } ‘The bardest thing about after-dinner speaking, for the average man, | seoms to be to sit down when he has finished. <a [Dollars and Sense By H. J.B | | ggr7r HERE are certain new o0-/ "8. The psychologists of the | I called solences springing up pevoctting ,direct, vocational nowadays which are little ion have not proved less than fakes,” said a prominent $y. They ha merely Ree eae: manufacturer, “Probably thelr ex- rin proposing the method. it Rees came Se ei Ponents are sincere. But for lack of ne tar they bate nat a rey] ‘ sheer common sense they cannot see thelr case . The New Haven Railroad has succeeded ip getting back J the obvious limitations of their al- Aigcovercd Perens pata Seve yet *® trom one of its former directors, John H. BI $1,260,000 “diverted” in siock transactions which preceded the absorption of the Boston and Maine. The millions that disappeared in the process of trying to make the New Haven a holding com- leged discoveries. A theory which sults of the on our 00-9} tosts i students id thi it works beautifully in a laboregoty far‘cstabiisteds thers ef ee eee eee ne are Paychologists but, who have studied the applied to practical affairs in which |;°ts used have failed to find ratlon * fe : autke 2 heres jee after a diligent investigat 4 5 mfiot actors Thee: pany for everything of value in New Hugland do not seem to : 2 a p ae , Bugenics is one so-called ecience to | question of voontious aieetes f have all evaporated into the blue ether. Why don’t New Haven cy S > ‘ | wanton this seen a ore aiee i through physical characteristics. Itsf] ba . others are experims a] yl find ‘son thi h > stockholders set President Howard Elliott to rummage arotind 2 ; < : ~ wes, 00d the test of phyMlGh! charagters | Crcunes on this method were as fol ‘and locate a few more? vo ss 4 . Str 2 or, {antics as applied to selection of voca-| + -Tnis seems to be a developinent of ioc Sr a 2! Sen : tions, Both these sciences are now |tho old iden of phenology. Tt te clenacd j : : x prominently before the public. ‘in this system fat physical characterts- VERDUN. = A eroaeh tests designed to give a ties indicato certain abilities, | Kop. ex- . - p s . subject a percentage rating as re- s ye money-making - er D | gards such qualiti memory, at- /in76 wil have s certuln shaped teed RMIES no longer mect to conquer or be conquered. They! ¢ 5 a - " - | mon, Gheerrasies, sageeat ibility, executives were picked St randamnnt , yy m apperception, ete., It was figui At thelr physical characteristics charted ‘ & person cou guided Into voca- We do not find that they conform at all only meet to die f : | 1d be guided int We ai Weighed against the trivial results at Verdun the terrific | a = tions In which the qualities in which | to any law. Also, we found men whe 1 he was strong were di 6d. had the physical’ characteristics that hter must fill the world with horror at the futility of it all. ‘To : : . rer man . {The faculty of the University of Sift" cowthing but executives” Ain what purpose do men by tens, fifties and hundreds of thousands give Sussensiity: Guteloped ALAyeTaIa oe Patan ate tee Reade nee ‘Weir lives when the flag for which they fight only oscillates a few etree ectekl Saa roe Fs Tammie iar lp Tt yards backward and forward for all their sacrifice? What must be the feelings of women and children at home to realize that husbands and fathers are being pushed forward day after day to a line where death awaits them, with hardly a hope of winning or even a risk of — ee along the lines he is studying, con- The university finally decided that ducted. a lengthy investigation of ex-) the only practicable method of find- perimental psychology as <pplied to|ing a person's real niche was the » The Jarr Family i The Unknown Heroine | fein cee sition i dorored soe ot Soba ee | ByR L. Mcc fT By Sophie I Lost ‘"L The paychologists’ definitions do| speaker, “that sounds like good comn~ ¢ -— By Roy L. cCarde —— By Sophie Irene Loeb — | pot define and the tests are merely fur-) mon sense. As Dean Schnelder says, Josing—only to be gro.nd to pieces against a great war wall that oaeaaanenanaapenanaanananaaetiny eapanecmenarenneatanpemaaaanat allie Iiveturee: 6 Gorlod ot tine. tench never changes! Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) Coprright, 1916, by The Press Publisting Oo, (The New York Evening World). | sctertite me ters do Bot, 9 peer to be proner than other methods proposed, Timo was when tho agony of battlefields i ein t RS, JARR had snatched away | legally, or advising the big corpora- HIS week a woman took her lit-!and day she has tolled so as to keep ables ehter into the result But it insures @ reliable verdict’ *. an, wien b: pi . soi heen a victory for some that portion of the evening] tions to cheat legally.” | tle flock of four children and|the wolf from the door, and to stifie| — = one, when brave and gallant action, even to the going d deat! f going down to death, paper that contained the full] “Well t is enough to make a fel-| cogether with her husband|the germs tuat insisted on multiply- z : “produced results. If one side lost, at Jeast one side had won and the|Page March sale of dress goods ad-|low sore!” growled Mr, Jarr, “Busi-| went to the Sone ase This|ing, he denied herselt everything if Double-Decker : War-Ambulance Y ‘i ch a verlisement that interested he ness has slumped, the boss has a|mother is a heroine, She 1s unher-|order to secure the best milk, the best Jonged-for conclusion lay that much nearer. But now courage, hero- Unfortunately the other side of the] grouch, and | wouldn't be surprised | alded, unknown, and no halo of glory Re eG lt ter ga een Gndcan| ism, the last ounce of strength and the last drop of blood decide—| page had, the sporting news, and|if a bunch of us got canned—and| encircles her hopeful face. I have |intelligent mother She wron what | nothing. Mrs, Jarr held the side she was read-| think of Chtrlie © plin getting a] been in communication with her; and | was needed, but alas! she had not | ; yp ch a sla F that Mr. | bonus of $100,00 0 oving | if ever the spirit of self-sacrifice and|the wherewithal to purchase it and What must be the moral effect on soldiers who see no gain orl inst P zi Mages, Hf AE HES, ERS OC A100 00 UNE £01 Bn Bay Ne A : § arr could not reac Jose for all their dead! How can men fight at all when » a ishe shrank f e ch . | sporting | picture contract, Why, the signers of| bravery possessed any one it ts found |{ie shrank from the chill of charity. ed but fifteen dollars | , : editor's dope us to how long Moran} the Declaration of Independence} in the soul and body of this mother. [4 week, She lized something ha@ achieves so little? |would last with Willard, were it not/didn’t yet a cent; in fact, they were| Her three children have contracted |to be done before the Grim Reaper consumption. Night |#0t the best of her. So she began to! = |look for somewhere to go, where there ia enneseigeneeianansindpgpesienmsamdgecgeec jfor the fuct that both the fighters} lucky they didn’t get hanged. And) the dread disease, had the big end of the moving plc-|the corporation lawyers—look at the 3 How erratic, after all, is efficiency, . |Was much oxygen that would kill the! ture privilege. If the fight did not go} money they get!" of the window. '$ Clara Mudridge-|bacteria in her babies, She read ad- The train conductor and the Pullman conductor move down ut least eight rounds the moving pic- “We don't even get a look at it,”| Smith,” she said. ‘There's her elec- vertisementaén the papers. the parlor car together punching tickets right and left, Behind tures would be of little commercial] said Mrs, Jarr, “Butif Tam to listen|trie brougham down by the curb.) ) io, copie. ugar hate mene dé comes the colored porter with a dustpan to remove the trail of valu to your worries, when T have plenty|She's come to tell me her troubles.| means. It was a farm, a leoly tiny paper discs from the carpet, In all these years it has “Can't you wait tll 1 ain through {Gf my own, you can pay me for it,| Your well-to-do friends never come to) little farm, away off from civiliza- . : ; hed vill charge ev: sec you unless it is to tel their trou-| Hon and from che big city where she never seemed worth anybody's while to use a punch that would with the pap asked Mrs, Jarr,{!m fact, T think I will charge every ve } had always lived. But it was six hold the punched out pleces until they could be dropped into |"What are you so interested In?” |single troubled soul that comes ¥o me PIE oa ton them youre,” aug-| hundred and tweivo feet above the| the scrapbox. | Mr, Jarr did not care to say he | to unload their griefs after this gested Mr. Jarr. | eae " Raye tae ee - | s - | prestes » ol sho) Just at that instant the door bell:” «| haven't any that money can't e cres of space BP “Doub! eo tendants. Di laced fore end How long was it before some lawnmower pusher was interested in the championship ‘ x, y and sunshine, My “baby, eighteen | W uble-Decker” ta the war's tendants. Doors are pi pap ag Ue re paca nD thought boxing bout now arranged between [rang below and Mrs. Jarr looked out cure,” replied his good lady. montha old, is a splendid eae | latest tmprovement for Hu-| aft, permitting an attendant to enter 10 Ly 6 ind the knives to save the labor of raking | Willard and Moran. Mrs. Jarre was a) of health, in direct contrast to the | ropean ambutances. Access to oy nt teas the chauttour whe up the grass? first three. We shall try this week : . x lover of peace and abhorred fighting, " ei f | the interior is given at either #ide/ the car is in motion, as well as from When shall we decide to consume smoke instead of spend- pelea lola one aN j How Men’s Habits Began i dollars ‘for my husbands dater {Ye | of the car. ft 19 designed on'e two-| the ‘rear at other times, ‘The root ing time and money to rid lungs, linen and landscape of the France” or somewhere in Madison| $ 3 |to work to the village (a distance of | *ory plan. ‘The err gory, ge deck, | 18 bullt atmntlar to ne of 9 ses ui 1 ' vhe is built im two sections, each sup-| or railrvad, car, ; effects of it? i Square Garden; To avoid an ont Oopsright, 1916, by The Prews Publishing Oo, (Tho New York Evening World), tunes sade Bait Selim Snare he has) irted on folding arme that enable| chanics, and is fitted with @ eerles . - ” break of hostilities in the domesti No, 8~Sleeping. jhad to pass by that one about sleep| “With the help of the children,| it to ¥ sd me Ay wath we oF ore ore Nee vpar't - trenches Mr. Jarr hastily mumbled co ome ro making people fat. It appears that | aged fifteen, thirteen and ten, respec. | lower Wer, In loading, this Tear ond Hits Fro m Sh arp Wits Meat Sacha taan' letateatadiin, att ac WwW ae home late, an deen those portions of us that work while tively, we ahall cultivate the garden, 5 atretcnef to be placed fa the upper alto, near the front on each, wide tec BATE) Si00% Into the fa at | we'r bi D t r| frame, w’ i. , equip - Marrying for maney Ra Pod Dahl Keowing he can’t, Is never count of @ hotel for sulcides, which corner and pile a couple of | bits pr ag 3 ae wrek nett nae Reratees Bonney Bichace aint venient height, and then pushed into mem and ean auxiliary RJ of map or the hardest] cre ‘or possexsing praiseworthy | some advanced soclological promoter = ; day, ve Ch i osition with comparative ease, fuel. The | arrangemen erent s ‘way on earth to carn a living.—Mem- | emotions. —Toledo Blade. Lgl er Bical Promoter | sofa pillows on top of 11. SILtINE | Tee ne eee tenets we goon | year we can Invest tn @ cow and| Por tousty ie is much easter for| wounded to be loaded into the aa Commercial Appeal. e . . ad prop . down, we yawn, then remove one | jing, “T have no thought of failure! 1| both the patients end ambulance et-! bulance from both sides at once, eye Many a man starts on a fishing trip| Mrs. Jarr was aroused to such al shoe, yawn again and take off the| ‘To those who are in the habit of|am sure you can readily realize that it takes more than a five-cent shine | !'" nunnly of bait and a red, only joint of interest that she put down | ¢ y, At last, with a sigh of pure | dreaming, we would offer a piece of | though people are r they s = fend a ton-cent shave to give mar a| to return with the bait inside of nim: |" ‘ B | orter ’ id s Piece o igh peop poor they stil re ile the paper to air her views, oy, we dive between tho sheets, It's | friendly advice: cut it out. It's not |tain the remnant of pride that makes § Polished look.—Philadelphia ‘Tele- | Mel" and the fish silll in the water,— Pee EL dae nidntdcsth aha canmea: | feiss it and, by het, we're {Only @ waste of.time, because it in-) it impossible ty accept alms. I am we By Samuel Smiles @raph. ans Btater, bo sui he asked. | Saturday nigh p . terferes with good sleop, but it's very |only one of thousands of’ mothers a Re: 8 8 . | “Yes,” replied Mr. Jarr, “it's not al going to sleep until we can sleep | dangerous. 1 im that a man|who have their children's welfare (By Pe of Harper & Brothers As lon, ttack: | By Permission arp ) There may be something a woman| 4/0008 we rare eae fanan con | bad idea, either, The promoter says| no longer. |who talks in his sleep always tells | close to their hearts,” ‘ te joys more than dosing the family,| Hur You mas hat he Ie not a). will have lethal chambers, with all| No one invented sleep; it's just | th® truth, no matter what his wak-} She may be “one of thousands,” but E ey we don't know what it is.—Col- Prey ft et ies: : - ling babit’ may be, and a careful lis- |the splendid soul of her will go march-| No, 23—The Law of Chance. in relation to the number of lettsrs ‘umbta State. whigreita.t ; | the comforts of home, and those who| what It always was and with no im- | tener can get some mighty damaging |ing on as one in a thousand. When SDEBD, there would seem to be noj Posted, from one year to another. . . . finding out a pone +4 usefulness in| wish to shuffle off » mortal coll] provement&; there couldn't be any. | evidence about a fellow's past career. | she first thought of the plan it seemed N . 14, Now, it is the business of man t» Mis uke tilen to sing Anodehitine toa phat is sald about YOU be! can pay him §150 and he will give|Our oldest ancestor had more th ‘The old timers used to think that |herculean—mpossible to reach. She such thing as chance in the world, | understand the laws of health, and a aha iy sournal. \them a room with every mechanical | for it than we do, because he wasn't | dreams meant a lot, and this gave | had not even enough furniture to take) Man lives and dies tn conformity|to provide against their cons= 2 | tie : : Ccommuter, Te lived within a hun-|a great chance to a’ bunch of wise-|to the country. A few kind friends! to » law. A sparrow falls to the| quences: as, for instance, in the mat- Letters From the Pe 1 or chemleal contrivance for self-de-| dred yards of the banana grove, but jeyed fakers, When you woke upjgave her some cast-off pieces. She| In obedience to @ law, Nay,| te? of sickness, accident’ and proma op e struction, But before the rash act| probably kicked lke a steer when |some morning with your nerves ali| painted and renovated them until| sound In o + N8¥:\ture death. We cannot escupe the ‘Three RK | | des 7 is committed moving pictures will be} he was called in’ the morntng to|shot to pieces over a dream about |they were attractive. there are matters in the ordinary | consequences of transgression of the Wo the Raitor of The Evening Wo | slong the crowded atrest, {n imminent | own automatically, ‘These will de. | Walk over and pick up enough atuff | black cats and white horses, aa lane saved up enough to pay for| transactions of life, such as one|natural lawa, though we may have, NE ret vessone | Td Ch eeank pecker. ROR eee euere oy 88 | Coane call in one of these boys. He'd look | theee months’ rent in advance--it was| might suppose were the mere result] meant well. We must have done we thouaialena Tawae Gemate hans fel cine unpleasant sides of s-| ‘phere are always ple who are | solemn, read a lot of stuff out of alonly eight dollars per month. ‘Then|of chance, which are ascertainea to| well, The Creator does not alter his ‘Why borees should be sharp-shod in PHabt to block en ers have no | cide”— unhappy unless th are taking | big book and then collect @ nice, fat |came the real worry. There was not|be of remarkable accuracy when |laws to.accommodate them to our tg winter: First—Ae a humane propoal- | ae, v0. blo me nets ane et gn WEhere are very few people who | {Ringe apart to see what makes | fee. enough money to transport the little| taken in the mags. For instance, the} norance, He has furnished us with fon. As a lover of the noble animal! to thousands of 4 eer? roe in 5 tt Sian) 4a inaye them tick. ‘They have heen digging | ‘There are some pretty stiff stories |family to the “Utopia.” A good man| number of letters put in the post- | intelligence, #o that we may under- ‘an owner of horees myself, 1 get | block on the suri 4g tt MOY | WOU CONNIE suicide ey had/ into this matter of bp, but of |about dreams, which they clatm are |leard of it-one who spends as much / office without an address, the number | stand them and act upon them; pap Gwaer of horas myselt, 1 vt Mockaces he marie jf nes are | $160," remarked Mrs. Jurr, “Bosides,| course can't quite agres on what|true, Coleridge took a three hour|for a single dinner for a few com-| of letters wrongly directed, the num-| otherwise we must suffer the conse is gsainiia and Gling ca| a Grese, Th oo Fawled Across | that ign't what is needed, What is} makes us do it, Some say our nice |nap one day and composed a real|panions. A triend of the family trans-| ber containing money, the number | quences in Inevitable pain and sor- Te eated pireaia Tee nerves | the remedy te ac ine mNCO and | eded te a Bureau of Public Com. | little nerve centres Ket all loaded | poem, “Kubla Khan.” Me jumped up | mitted the money, and oh, the Joy that | unstamped, continue nearly the same, | row. | down with sarcolactic acid, which |and wrote out fifty-four lines of it, |{t carried with it! ee _ — eapesnriee .06, foe peer, heats are “Imexcusable Neglect.” | forting. Qt is needed, and needed} our muscles turn out when we do |The pocm ts there to prove it, Other | Tvery day. men, risk, thelr lives. 1 f Of later, down in a heap they go, only To the Péttor of The Evea.ng World; jbadly, I wish 1 was in charge of|any real work This dopes the | fellows have worked out hard prob- | They do daring dee is. one Jumps in- J u n | e T a s or Cc h i | d re n to get up and start the performance |, 1 read recently of a dead horse left | one, either on salary or commission, | nerves. We commerce to yawn and | lems in mathematics and business; to a pit to save @ fife. Another | * @il over again. There are plenty of | !¥ins outside of a stable, in the street, | 1 arn tired of being a Private Bureau | S00) are snoring thers clatm about |tangles in their sleep. The best|swims in icy waters to rescue the} ~yiMMY MONKEY was sitting out- I don't believe it,” answered dheap devices ‘om the market to stop for forty-eight hours. T wish the | : h “ the same thing, but insist it is the |that the majority of ws get out of! drowning. Daily, they face death in side of his house one day whem | Jimmy, feeling of his head. Gis thie, and 0 bores owner who haen't public might take up this subject, of Comforting without pay, braingthat gets clogged up with that|{t, however, {s to wake up some! some form, Yet fore, iy one, braving he thought he felt something bit “If you don't believe it, why do ia @nough humanity in him to provide| Another case of this inexcumble| “Whom have you been comforting | sleepy stult morntng In a cold perspiration over | life, handicapped by disease, ready Cal nat feel of your head?" asked the little gem should be forced to do #0 by Bestect game to my uttention Sve or | recently?” asked Mr. Jarr SM RIGR ate tna aera leap te ped Steen cree eoae SAE age a reader, blessed with’ 'He°gat vere still, and pretty soon, | ™ascal: x weel . Who t nI “ i Spiel vegetables are fond of a nup, So do|down Main eet in half a ult o! ou, & der, — blesse nt » oS eer? w, Seconds @ business propo. | Ree oa eo ulcine aise blaine for 1 have been comforting you, when | hot tect hurt if the shs but fragrant.| paisinas every tie of security and success, and, “Spat!” something hit his head again. mous eee fe mart you ought to make a, One would naturally suppose Aa Mg, YOU come home cross after reading} gavlie fully to return your morning | Some fellows cl be able to | still having a grievance, reflect on this; Looking up, he saw the Baby Bi rd plasters for # Wing! F t & man owning @ horse would Ai Giaaainns © + M. | avout all the money Charley Chaplin] greeting. It may sti be asleep. |get along on four ho oe put | mother, who defies death itself be-| boon grinning down at him and toas-| ‘Then another acorn came down and Want to give * reasonable protection ‘ an . iultae ainginelin it : It in the duty and pleasure of mods [they aro scarce’, Most of ta never | cause she smiles her way into the sun-| at his head, Jimmy soampered into the house, ‘He Gs & matter of economy. Here is a | Toth Laver a The Fvming Word: gota for playing In the movies, und] tt Meiance to KIC Tate tice Tock | eae’ enough. Old yawning | shine, \ said Jimmy, did not go after the Baby Baboon ndid hor 4 tomes bined and where ree Preside Wilaon torn all the money the big corporation] pin ail those old stories they told qvhen he Woke up i skept, bling —> ? hat twenty! Your grievance is a shadow hy com! * have a bole in your head} until the next day, year Uap parison. ' pow,” wald the Baby, x Then Be made him squinal D. BR ‘lawyers gel for chains the public us when we wae hays. Wut taay el ee ee rie = — eee eel “ - we tae eee ee memes ee tee s f

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