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

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be Wiorld. MEFARLISHED BY JOSEPH PULTTAER. sit es Puvitedes Datly Breept Guptny vy ite, Paes Pudiisning Company ER, Presid LTTE oe : ATZDR, Jr, Secretary. 68 Park Row. = New T Becond-Claws Matter. Dureortption Rates to The Evening |For Pnelans and the Coneinem and 42 to ‘Works for the United States All Countries in the International and Canada. Postal Unto: . Wne Toor ........ pers) seeeeeeeses. $360/One Year... . .80/One Month VOLUME 56......... PLAYING VILLA’S GAME. HILE Carranza is exacting reciprocal favors anu uttering his stiff civilities the murderer-brigand is retreating deeper! into the mountaine of a part of Mexivo which he knows as! he knows the palm of his hand, and where the peopie are for the most} part his admiring friends Chis is unfortunate. Every day of delay gites Villa a better! chance of laying plaus and choosing hiding pieces which may give his pursuers weeks ot months of hard work before they even get a glimpse of him Carr NO, 19,9 bass wish to revonciie Mexican public opinion to the presence of United States troops on Mexican soil las received due con- sideration from this Government. The Mexican General's troops will have the privilege of croasing into American territory whenever there ia reason for it But bow much further and lung is Mexican public opinion to y public opinion that Carranza considers must 8 public opinion that supports the de facto Government. ‘Tlie worst toe of the de facto Ge coddied? [ne ernment is Villa. Instead of parieying until) Villa adds to his strength by becoming more than ever the outlaw ero, why not try the effect on Mexican public opinion of « prompt) an troops joined with United States forces in »» eneiny? AMBASSADORS ARE HUMAN. OME aiethod should be devised by States Ainbassadors can get a rest without starting a round of hard-working Un.te rumors that have fallen down on the job. Other public ificials Lake a vacation now and then and nobody wonders why. But vecause a representative of the nation at a foreigu court has to be xuthorized by his Government to leave hia post inference is always ready to hint that he can’t be leaving of his own accord i the last eighteen months there have probably been few der worked men in Berlin than Ambassador Gerard. Nobody} eds to be told the amount of diplomatic business he has bad to; handle for his own country. In addition the American Embassy at! Nerlin has been verforming innumerable services for belligerent Gov-| ernments who no longer have representatives at the German capital. Yurthermore, only a few weeks ago Mr. Gerard broke his collar-boue— which hardly acts as a tonic on 4 tired man. Mr. Gerard deserves a holiday at home or wherever he chooses to take it. That is the way the State Department feels about him. His fellow citizens wish him fulleet benefit from the rest he hae well! earned JAPAN’S MERCHANT MARINE. PAN has inade remarkable progress in shipping, but persons in this country who try to soare us wiih the vision of gigantic Japanese merchantmen converied into instruments of w r) veuring down upon us, fleet after fleet, are referred to figures which a Tokio newspaper compiles from a repo ment of Communications, The fact is Japan has only six sinps of more tuan 10,000 tons, she has only sixty-six that register above 5,000 tons. Her # hole mer-) hant marine consists of 2,132 vessels over twenty tons, wit! a total tonnage of 1,604,900. The United States 1 n 1915 ov The figures speak for themselves, Nevertheless what Japan has done is wonderful when we realize that it has been done in fifteen years. Hor a pe rom 1635 to 18. as against the Imperial laws! In 1845, we are told, a Russian inan- war was wrecked on the coast of Japan and submerged by au earth juake, The surviving Russian sailors started building ooden schooner, which wae the first time Japanese shipbuilders had iad a chance to study the actual consiruction of European vessels. 1 3 not until 1890 that Japan built her first steel ship of the Japanese Depart- rehant mar mn 1 bered w Hits From Sharp Wits You've probabiy noticed that some|inan who te s:nart enough to got people make the mistake of piling on! sucker's money away from him. News, + * If it were true that w If people could see themeeives a) ineir husbands every time others they would €e @! 0 inoney, the men would certainly compo ‘have a News There ts also a bottom, but most y ry A Many a men rete a big repuration | !for virtue aud morality when, if the By woing to vaudeville sows YoU) truth were known, tie poor boob was certain ‘how jokes ound eD | pimply scared of getting caugit. Co. ! spoken which you have beon reading, | M™BIy Scared art Albany Journal, | A | ee { The older the tradition joved by the superstition: 6 more it) Miladi says don't always blaine the| other fellow; just now and then take; @ square look at your own mean. | Lemphi inmercial Appeal, Also, every minute there ts Letters From the People Cites a Queer Prophecy. come & repuouct’ ‘The a. To the Léitor of The Brening World |"In 1918." Now, strange as t While looking over some old books| seem, two of the dat the other day t cal | the seer, ome pass fuse ged ‘Beer's Prophecy,” which ran, | was pro in 1871 the scattered n effect, as follows: When the pres-| Germa. uulted emplie as, cul elser’s father, Frederick, in the the result of the Franco-Prossian year 1849, consulted a celebrated seer,| War. The grea! he asked ‘the fortune-teller these three | “Unser Fritz qpestions: 1, “When will Germany | give t was in 1835 me a united empire?” The soer's | But ar 191s 9 rn ewer 871," 2, “When ehall| dete wae: 3 Empire would Taiet ” 6 answer was, “In 1888."| bec ite, Wheveas the war 4. "When will the German Empire be-| is ow kong On Mra R Such Is Fame. Oy yy oe father and said. ‘Fat showed @ current-event picture Ameo") | The “cer se J wth and finally lam week. Among the events | iid: “Why. dost ou know? He wi the noted | shipwrecked and cast up on an island.” | "Ob. yes, I do remember reading abo that,” maid the daughter --Kenges City | i The Evening World Daily Magazine, The Gila Monster Tuesday, Bd AS Womanhood and Revenge -— By Sophte Irene Loeb —— 1916, by Phe Dress Pabliahing Os The Jarr Family —— By Roy L. McCardell — 16, dy Tho Press Publishing Co, (Tle New Yor’ Brening ke Brening World), young woman takes her own honor tn 6 fond husband fectionate father as ltered his domicile the and wensed the oss of the oi Gertrude, the “s her woman she should end such and idlled a This Is what sh Warren came t would be ag ong, and I thought ts justiflable, j| tere are hundreds of inen, A |New York City, 26,000 ships with a total tonnage of more than 5,300,000, |; r her unhappines to be present when it burned. >» Mr. Jarr passed back and again asked where Mrs. Jarr y at ought to be shot ‘ courts similar {4 equal to man's. not to keep supper waiting for {extreme youth in d of 218 years-—|tni anything but —to build a vessel of more than fifty tone in Japan }v What we need more than any-! Gaing else in th litte more of the go other side mig ine heey so ues Ihe any 4 old-fashioned esked | departed, By th’ of women should }dom with the she took ‘em “Shall 1 serve t replied li you be my wif oss of the rac wht" to take a as essential two days after t to condemn are pronoune else is dungerous and oft Both Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy Robert Louis Stevenson, @ walk and you will find of fur clumsy, det but a few vung woman j the JUST ABOUT DOG: leading distinction between married her, | and, it is sald, even agreed the|that the man should be shot, two months the mnths pass burted He will do nothing plain- t processes of our 1 all be bent into the haps before the different dur- ation of their lives, is the other cannot, To- tha” Geet they can comfortably | ledo Iade jdid the deed nutterial life w The absence of thi confines the dog in the ¢ of his intellect many epeculatio’ nvould It not have been better to have| beginning of imecapnysics. her elders, had them deal wit the man according to the law, and| thus perhaps saved berself all the! pis conduct justified, present publicity? ‘vhis woman has the advantage of having an influential family behind} ashamed of having barked or bitten. her to flgut for her defense in court. bow about the girl who has no such advantage and hides hey shame hey want, {Was more w reckless, you 9 him from r words are tho mecking ble tme.—-Macon|of ver flance that was responsible, All dogs are snoba—though in vary- {t ts hard to follow their ugh I think we can p of rank, we caun is the eriterton, ‘fhe poor man's dog ts not offended ve di. resp | ite would be in case of such a ca- | same blow it saves superstitions and lus silence has won for him a higher nawe for virtue than of gentiemanly feelin, theft and falsehood ar vices, He ie never more than half But to be caught lying, if he under- not a cold glance of an eye observers he | wrvea A nuing for truth, the dog! has been credited with modesty is amazing how blinds the faculties of man- iuso vainglory flids no vent {n words creatures supplied been unable to de and how much these giris the example vealed unwritte would certainly create use of language | to_be thus wounded! man as courtiers | laws, stringent laws, be properly enriched ‘and began to wonder their favor Passes lives; pct a fault go gTOSS with sinecures, in the world of picking. perhaps the bus: and thelr Joys ma aie iuterminably we entertained in some Way may | be Jon the second date | referres ire’s votce, are those mom 1 what with his and his folble for 5 time he would 1 agd pieasu: naidoration | ibtless when ma toils of a p the sexes, then Me should have his the woman he hie howling full well be a dog of any when this ma end 6 iage offer is withheld! y toe interest, & edmiretion. a the hot pursuit of| foreune their true Vake out your puppy fer! ceape (be Jupee of thelr amoltion By J. H. Cassel Word nicely. “No, warm. I'll wadt a litt Mr. Jarr took the e ani tried to read “Won't you have your r Jarr?” asked looking “Mra, Jarr tuld me * to walt her, and T have an engagement into the flat} my gentleman friend ts watting for as] mo. “You can go,” said Mr. J. er," sure the folks will be home an the | ment now." over, #0] ‘The girl put on her hat, took Mrs, Jarr’s fan and a few other personal jornaments she had cached aside and time Mr. Jarr had re- | flect that he was a much-abused man, #upper/and half resolved that he would go} out and seek the cheerful companion- | ship of Gus’s place, ‘Then be began to wonder {f his wife and children had met with any accident, a smash up in the subway, disaster in being run over by @ murderous foy-rider, | he little ball | or smashe falling elevato dered, wut | OF Smashed in # falling elevator, | the fldgets. First, he began to | | in | mind, fr | tion, Pe for | hospital, maybe tn the Morgue! The realization of how empty the children? d been pretty good happened the Then he laughed at h f Mrs. might not have stopp nd’s house. He w phous brisk) ous of Ha rooklyn, by lady had no teley He was putt on a forlorn ked {n. ‘The children wore Brooklyn,” sald Mrs 1p the telephone bo. P 4 | Selah Sides of the steak were burned said Mr. Jarr, “they'll all be| other evening] back any minute. Keep the supper| Other dire possibilities crossed hi a girder failing from skyscraper in the process of erection to the blowing up of a manhole in forms of an elaborate and mysterious | the streets. Women and children seldom carry any data of identific: naps they were now in the lamity made the cold pepspiration | wi! | by tho notice of the rich and keeps | stand on his forehead. He got up and all bis ugly feelings for those poorer| turned on the light with shaking, or mote TARees be ule marier, And | nands, {deal of behavior to which the mac |that he’ tried to laugh ter, under pain of derogation, will do |aching influence felt. Suppose she n has | had left him? Suppose she had take formed | lisappotnted | yPwould| Yes, ho g than such things DO happen, HAVE A tormenting sub-thought made its | again Jarr in at hed the tele- minutes and the Hicketts @aid uo wae having @ colidren’s March 14, 1916 Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Coprriaht, 1016, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening World) M’ DAUGHTER, harken unto my wisdom, for J have known much | Husband! | And that which my Wedding Ring hath taught me I will tell thee freely, that thou mayest not stumble in the path of Matrimovy, nor eet thy feet in subtle snares. 4 Rehold, there dwelt two Brides in Babylon who had married THEORY. And the First Bride said unto the Second: “Lo, unto me marriage is an Ideal, NOT a Deal! Behold, mine Husband ‘s my Companion, and I am his Soulmate and his qual. Therefore shall T ask nothing of him save Love and Loyalty—nay, not even so mich as @ shekel “Por faim not his Chattel, to be ‘Bought and Paid For! " Hut the Second Bride answered hor, saying: Verily, verily, | adm're thy epirit of Independenc “But, alas! unto ME Marriage {e @ Graft, and mine Huebaud |s mr ‘Good Thing. Therefore shall I demend Everything of him “And to return I shall give him nothing but ki peradventure, three hot meais a day.” Now, at the end of the first year the two Brid pther, And the "het Bride wore a last year’s hat and the remains of her going away gown But the Second Bride came tn a Hmousine and was covered {n sable J'emonds pon & { to herself at the feet of the Second Bride and ok upon me, Little Wisenheimer! Alas, alas! what have ail my Advanced ‘Theories profited me? Vor, behold! mine Husband hath take me at my Word! And because T asked NOTHING he hath given me nothing-—nay, not even the Love ant Loyalty ) 1 did ask! Lo! even now he sporteth with a Chemica! Blonde. For le hath plenty of Leisure wherein to amuse himsei!! r the Second Bride coniforted her, saying Be of good cheer, oh, Foolish One, and profit by thine EXPERIENCE. Tor this much hast thou gotten {n return for all thy labo “Lo! as for Me, I have kept mine husband so busy supplying my wants my whime and my vagaries that he hath no TIME wherein r women, Yea, when he returneth from his labors he fs too cate to look a ng t Weary 10 leasures and yearneth for nothing save to his head upon my shou and be petted and cajoled and caressed "Verily ily, unto her that demandeth much from a man shall be given even more than she demandeth, but unto her that demande shall be denied even the little which she asketh “Tehold! I did put a HIGH Price Tag upon myself, but thon didst give thyself awey as a Trading Stamp. And why shall an husband cherish « voman that holdeth herself cheaper than a cigarette coupon? for when a man seeketh an automobile he secketh a bargain. but when he seeketh a wife he seeketh a treasure, and the more sho coxteth m the more he treasureth her. “It is written thus In the Book of Husbands nothing “Yea _1n every marriage there {s ONE Good ‘Thing and one only, | I charge thee, see to it that Thou art not ‘IT!'” ‘Dollars and Sense By H. J. Barrett A 1) first thought old bones do not equivalent to t utvaler 5 per cen : ps a . and er cent. bone fF mpress one ae being Larapaiy This means bon oxi able, But the Amert=| tentiizing quality, s learned that bones! The principal problems to be faced powder and applied to} !n y pov valuable discovery oh are those of loading and transporta- soll so enrich Mt/ tion, Native labor ig plentiful at s ground bones @t) $1.50 per day. A heavy surf and an y good investment. | absence of harbors mean either that sume for tits] Hehtere de used or an nertal res accumulating | CAD! siretehed from the shore to an {mport) It has been suggested that the navy {on dollars’ worth annually | colifer which takes coal to Alaskan i, Canada, Mexico and| potnts and the islands several times a year be utilized for the transporta delight at ro-| tion of the bones. The collier could his own buck-|castly carry 6,000 or 6,000 tons cach depodit. of bones} or about a quarter of a million Pribilof Islands, | dollere' worth, Grinding costs but 78 Government, off| cents per ton. y millions! Or it may davelop tt, For over| more profits product n accu mmonta sphate of exiremely ‘igh tit will prove ble to ship to Japan, country which figures asa sr stantial tmporter of fertilizer material, way you figure it, we stand to an up & Stzeable fortune on thes bones, luppose there a salysia made by the, shiploads. Forty sniploads at 8280000 f Soils of specimens of bone|per load means $10,000,000, And from the botton from the surface | that's a dime for overy ian, womam of the deposits shows an average of/ and child tn the country. Let's buy, about 4.5 per cent. of nitrogen and|e cigar right now and enjoy ouw about £3 p of phosphoric acid, share of our unexpected legacy. mulating. The det square miles and range in depth trom | cl two to sx eau Ve “e8 Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers. § it evar right to break an engage-|@ome other young men, I ment of marriage? ine econ win her love?’ I firmiy believe that tt 1s not only] ner engageme right but essential that such an @n-| have a fair ci goxcment should be broken when| Tight prt ot «irl your lack of money cither ono of the two persons in-| Wl! not handicap you. volved no longer loves the other. To! “RG.” writes: “fam in love with marry in such conditions ts to keep] girl and have shown that T cafe the letter of a vow and break it io} toe ae A mutual friend tells me spirit. Of course, it ts sad and un-! noe permit'me to fang put she wil fortunate when one of two perso er hand or encircle ? (ishen to be released from ‘an. en-| admire tor gress, ahd although 4 gagement which the other stands | have made a declaration nt ts ctten ready to continue. ‘The person wh| tions, that act s rendered dimeal Still cares must suffer. Nevertheless, | by her coolness, “What anal! faces that saino individual would suffer! Make your avowal at once, ‘Feu Do you she has not announced t to some one else you ‘ance, and tf ghe ts the Infinitely more {f the marriage were | should not be afraid tHe to take place and the disparity in af-| you have been. givan an ‘euiny of fection were discovered afterward. A| the girl'a state of mind : qu clean break, however painful, arene wave a long-drawn-out agony, "| “A. 8." writes: “For two monthe £ ave heen paying attentio: J th Does She Care? whom T love very much” For fas ow, L." writes: “Lam tn love with | sake I have stopped drinking. Some- a young lady and when we are alone | times she ts nice to ine and at other together she acts as if she cared for | times she enubs me, yet when I asic me. But at @ social or a dance she|her she can give no reason for her turns to other young men and has | vartability, dota not go with any little or nothing to say to me till the /other man. Shall T give her up or time when we leave for home, Ij| continue our friendship?” have a position which will not. per. | T advise the latter course. Give the mit girl a chance to know her own mina me to entertain ber as well as Inenrrnnrnnnnmannnnmmnnnnncarnnen ann nnnnnnnnnnennnnmnnnnnece ld iG hrift “ By Samuel Smiles (By Perenteton of Hasper & Brothers.) { n 1 No. 27-—-The Miser. jthe future; that they should pro. ot in the least advocate | Vide during geod fine sor the ‘hal e r M1 4 imost invariably fol) mation of miserly, be-| them; that they should lay at OE habits; for we hate|of savings as a breakwater againot that we contend| Want and make sure of a little fund 1 provide for Which may maintain them in old = | 486, Secure thelr self-respect and add to their personal comfort and social le nephew, We ex-|well-being, Thrift {s not in any way ck befure you got| connected with avarice, usury, greed but they Wouldn't let us get|or selfishness. It ts, in ‘tact, the very nd I thougat you'd go out and| reverse of these ulsgusting dispor th while to telephone, | tions, It means economy for the pur. * | pose of securing independence. Thrift ME Ww What about? | requires that money should be used asked Mr. Ja ~ ‘and not abused—that it should be But be was @ changed man for an honestly earned and economically bour or two. employed,

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