The evening world. Newspaper, April 11, 1916, Page 16

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, April 11, 1916 Salina i : ' ronal reread aM e { - She ig Blorlo The Puzzl : eflect f ° wenn | e uzzle : By J. H. Cassel ections o | 4 ESTABLISHPD RY JOSEPH PULITZER —-~~e—> - Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Now. 63 to 7 63 Park Row, New York. RALPH PUL ITZPR, President, 63 Park Row. a J. ANGUS § HA ‘Treasuror, 63 Park Row, | JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row. i} i Ww saenniered, at the Post-Ottice at New York ax Second.Ciann Navies | By Helen Rowland pote g) Rates to The Vvening| For England and the Continent and ' orld for the United States All Countries tn the International Osortiaht, 1916, by The Prewe Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), Que pina eee . $3 Hi Ono Year.... $9.75 | ARRIAGE is the point at which a man stops looking a woman over 0! One Month | | and begins overlooking her. | OLUME 5 sseveeeeoNO, 19,067 | A great man fs one who fs ruled by his I!kes rather than by his dim | likes, by his enthusiasms rather than by his prejudices, by his admirations | rather than by his distastes, by his loves rather than by his hatreds. Many a girl has mistaken her love of a motor-car for love of the me; who owned it. 4 Somehow, it’s always the husband with nothing to do who seems td | need @ blonde affinity to help him. ; THE CITY'S RIGHT. $ THIS CITY to have a fair chance to adr and keep its own accounts? That is the question the Legislature will vote upon this week. If the city’s taxpayers could stand forth and shout their wishes with one voice the sound would have startling effect at Albany. Even 4s it is, constant interest and support from many quarters have given the practical programme, the essential lines of which were first laid! down by The Evening World, a momentum that makes it the most compelling force ever brought to bear upon the Legislature in thc} interest of the city’s finances, | ister its own ai fairs | Funny, but a woman who wouldn't belleve her husband's most elabugy | orate and convincing midnight “excuse,” on oath, will stake her faith J any little beauty doctor with a curly mustache who tells her that he o \transtorm her from an ugly duckling into a vision of loveliness for @ dollar and fifty-nine cents, The city bills have been prepared for the most part with the co | Most married men suffer from brain-fag; most bachelors from hearte operation and approval of Mayor Mitchel. They are entitled to the fag. moet careful consideration of every legislator, whether he hails from ere = hla bua fs is 3 Sreater Now Y t A man is so versatile thet he can carry on his business w' one this city or up-State. The people of Greater New York should les it} hand while he plays poker with the other; talk religion with hie iipe while be clearly understood that they demand for their measures the atten-| ‘he makes love with his eyes, and revolve a political question in his head tion they deserve. | | while he fox-trots with his fect. Plainer duty never devolved upon State legislators than the duty | — of Senators and Assemblymen of the State of New York to vote con-| Between husband and wife an ounce of politencss {s worth @ bushel scientiously and without party prejudice for the best interests of a of tender protestations. sity comprising half the popyilation of the Commonwealth they repre 4 ph | sent, and which contributes far more than half the taxes they so Dollars and Sense By H. J. Barret freely spend. N instrument called an aqua-;though they were preparing for @ % ver- | Spring drive on the enemy's trenches > | phone has recently been per-| Pring drive on the ene | fected which is sufficiently son-| HXbenslve rubber bands provided te German denials and German promises app: to be | sitive to register the leaking of water) ( surbon paper which costs from one | specially made for each other. [syste See a located many aid he i pan tS ve CO ae “ff a man could invent an aqua-{clear, sharp tinpr was flung could an away after going through the m phone which would detect the mant-/@6*y alte Nee Unites Alla j= fold leaks which sap the vitality of [eg y J | HOLD-UPS ON THE PACIFIC. Bafa ato wal oi np eb . FF OUD protests are heard in Japan against Great Britain’s persist- GaP eiaoiare ate thrown inte. U6 ST eaieeprrrenieea ) } ent action in stopping and searching Japanese ships. waste peak ae. Pl rr gation, Department heads we! 7 cerns annually, Lacking an aqua- ri , } The case of the Tenyo-Maru some weeks ago aroused spe- phone, the next best thing is a sys- | t wea ‘hereby ) . : : : : ; tem which will prevent unnecessary could obt era ‘s, pens » i be a The Tenyo-Maru was steaming from Shanghai to ° u Wane ies stone arbon r without d opera \ ish c 7 auditor of on emt ft that { lanila when, according to the captain’s report, a British cruiser fired SUBMARWE SeMaeae Dakee the, UIE remnants of that he had iat three live shells at her and forced her to stop. Armed British officers QROMIST |supplies were out of d which permitted the use then came aboard and took off nine Indian passengers. I Teian to Investigate. (ne cont a RCIA red Re Vativ. ti H inci the waste bask His findings were|tne new regime demonstrated that He , Native Japanese newspapers pronounced thie a serious incident iuminating. Scores of erasers which | the annual siving in erasers amounte which Japan could not afford to disregard. cost the company from two 1: in pencils, $300; in care | ten cents each were thrown 8, $270; in clips, $7 “We should not purposely elect to take steps to injure partially used. Panels, orisins ’ this total of $815 % the feelings of our intimate ally,” says the Yorodgu, in « lead- Food po tape menih bet Paes SA hg Bole ode he) sew momenta. 6 { 4 ded after being reduced to four) which the clerk appointed as stores | ing article, “but at the same time we should not offend Indians | oe tive fnches.. Clips, costing $1. per lk ep r de voted to this phase of his | ‘thousand, were used by the oflice boys | du iy talled but’ $50 a years! with whom Japan has been friendly for a long time. We Mite aa liberalis’ en (rat nevinees cannot regard the Tenyo-Maru affair simply as an incident fecldeionstssabgbbente ated, Ee oenL he bab 4 happening to nino Indians, It is not only @ great question bv\.og a vital bearing upon the development of Indo-Japanese | Water- Cooled Breeze trade, but also a serious matter affecting the honor of the — H¥ cooling effect of evaporati | Japanese Empire. 4 water is util in ¢ England has not confined her high-handed treatment of other The Jarr Family |The Girl Who Runs Away} sw. 0" nations’ shipping to the Atlantic, where she forced even this friendly rd wires of the fan Is a ag Government to protest against her acts. Why she thinks it worth —— By Roy L. McCardell — By Sophie Irene Loeb. ivance having at while to antagonize friends and allies by such indignities we cannot Copyright, 1916, by ‘The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Copyright, 1916, by ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World i ba 0 wiley aie “iy 1 st w see. Germany, it is true, set a vicious example of lawlessness and pecs bendiortiy down ibe relia an gushingly. “Its only] ay HE girl who ran away “to/causes that move girls to run away, |t, po revolves under the influence of | eet a trim maid ran a 0 and I'll make it up to you some escape the unwelcome at-| this mother’s words, upon the return t of Be ae 2 he bree: ‘om the fan, he les outrage on sea But Great Britain should have scorned to follow her. other time. And now,” she said, “I’m | tention of @ persistent ad-| of her daughter, are certalnis-stent?. G me bg na Raneknareanc Gr that example at any distance. “Oh, Mrs. Jurrt" she cried; “Mrs | just famished for some tea and mirer” has come back, Her} {cant: HERE aay sr avatnthto th ERICA hee Stryver saw you passing and sent me] mune!" mother and father aro] “I didn't let her have any house-| mach revolution, werling dainpened in | after you, Shu says can you come in) sg they had tea and muffins and|again made glad, and the anxiety| keeping responsibilities,” sie said, the process, says Popular Mecha ’ William R, Hearst is excited again at the Yellow Pertl, & moment? French pastry to finish, and then Mrs.| they have suffered is ended—for the|“and I spared her all the hardest The breeze from anh ne ' meaning Japan. He has been sometimes considered a bit of a Mre. Jarr paused, as though debat-| stryver said genially: present. Whatever the underlying}work, Perhaps that was wrong. a f¥sporate ; Ki —= “| blades as they sw uP young girl needs exercise and some-| ing a consequent cooling of the air thing to keep her Interested. Yes, I c ret s delivered into t think 1 tried to be too good to her, | ‘she dampness carried along ing whether the stress of social en-| | salah gagements would permit her to return,| “It secms so ridiculous to pay ninety- This indecision was simulated, how-| S¢ven cents for luncheon. It really is one himself! with me, my dear. You have your ever, Mrs, Jarr was aware of Mrs,| Silly to break @ $20 bill. You pay for | shopping to do!” en too. caretel oe her comfort; when it |ireeze adds to the cool feelin PER W530 OM PODULAR MECHANI ENERATION CON . Rangle looking out of her window] tt, my dear, and J will Up the waitress] But Mrs. Jarr was too angry Op. have been better to let her take | her share of duties and ve he ‘ She went right toward home in the e $ and responsibili- PAS OE fa Aa to see what was going on in the}@ dime I have here in my pocketbook. ties of life ROM official German casualty liste it is figured that out of| neigndorhood. And I'll remember it with the taxicab | Subway, but lishiod.s tem atations es This {4 doubtless the sum and aub- For the Easter Sho e * P * fs ne ‘ fare you paid. The nex low her street and came home as she|stance of the whole trouble. Very | bd German losses totalling 2,730,917 to date, at least 681,000] “1 saw you going by, my dear,” sald] fare you pi ie ia eae Relea started. oub ia aitaxicad, Un y do you hear of a girl running PP at have been killed. Mrs, Stryver, when Mrs, Jarr entered | 0Ut any AOE DIET TRO TERY” 205 | UNM ees rerandei eae nate cee away who is the main support of her AVE you noticed the dainty little] tuck into the belt or sleeve curt. ‘The wi ry ., with the maid, “and it Just occurred | everything, “ ) ‘amily, or who has to care for an lingerie clasps in the shops?| Makes a nice, sma token, ; This means—since the peace strength of the German army two . os -| Mrs. Jarr said, “Oh, no!" But my! |, “She needn't put on airs!” sald Mra | invalid mother, or who must make Tene tiie wantor reniene lovee ney alc is in the po an to me that you were going down Rangle to herself. “I'll venture to say | her own way in the world, Just the little Easter remem |i of gar bulbs ite . years ago was 870,000—that nearly 80 per cent. of the fighting force| town shopping. And 1 said to my-!She was mad, Then Mrs, Stryver de-| airs stryver paid for that taxicab! In the vernacul 5 rance you would like to give the ved in-an , anc , P ghling h his | clared she had to Ko to a musicale, andi tuck. Before 1d be @ toady’ and a| “stick.” Th Prusp aantinniie leoeiee t “plan he ie i i F i ‘ -{| self, ‘Why not have company this] lare sicale, back. Before po a toa “stick.” They are so busy continuing | py, bride ey are made up o etions for hin Is cone dev first put into the field has been utterly wiped out. This huge part pleasant day? Bewides, it dovsn't| added, “And I'm sorry you can't go parasite, I'd rather walk! the brave battle with “which they pew vintion and Alay buds in pink) Ai rhainental box With & dfiv of Germany's initial military provision has been fed to the monster. | Gost any more for two to go in a Ae lave Coiba eeihen noah ae Sra or white, and when fastened | Pox in corn mein the cover, Th i M elfish and think only | and blue o: e, and when fast POX iM COVerEd With rice. paper @ *, These 681,000 are not captured or wounded, but dead. Never-| taxicab than it does for one 4 [of thelr own sorrows. It iw usually on the shoulders give a charming h owt Prices Peane = ‘ ‘ Teall, than ealtian 4a Nutey." Fes the girl who has much time on her mnie fe. And they > 50 cents, and is quit Bary — more cen they fight battles, cultivate tlelds or rear children for the) soa'atre, darn cl was juat solos { Ho Wea po ns Bega n hands that hugs every little griev- Bee tae PL Gee ‘ anon whieh poppies, : i “ sine bulge . Ww ance close to her heart. are only 25 and 50 cents, ; yh ily been | —— Fre —- sir and, like the harvest of their year,! to run down to oy shopping aiatrist| ? She is tne spoiled darling of the Another practical gift for the Ch le! vor flower gladiolus, were mowed down and consumed. in the subway and order some things : : ‘amily. She is the little parasite who the linen bags for spoons. ‘These 1OP MIR Peee kde en . , «. | home and then rush right back again, | Ooprrigbt, 1016, by The Pree Pubilshing Co. (The New York Evening World), persista in dominating over her hard: | sma stamped, and gl aitt. Thon wun. be toate which When all the figures ere published we suspect there will be simi- Really, I'm not dressed well enough | No, 2—Swords. sire tke Romone Ve vas of the) Wereiad reeuree. ane is the sil done in. the outline is|t ven © pretty ge a A ; . i | ,| point was forgotten, but the secret| Who usually forgets the suffering of | done } bl i work forear: lar grim stories in Austria, France and Russia, Numerically speaking,| to xo in a taxicab with you “ stepped back with an angry) was divcovered again in the twelfth |ler parents by running away. She, Wickly finished. This oy are fae ita the: neitan nse! ‘ou look very sweet, oath and dropped lis band century. Napoleon, six hundred| usually gets her experience in the, cle, and the name works e sous: | fiercely to the hilt of his|yeara later, armed his heavy cavalry} school of “hard knocks,” and then | overlapping end of the bieg males it with a long, straight sword, and oniy|she learns the value of home and possible to locate the spoons withou those who Had to try and stop one of|mother and father, and wishes she| the anne of opening several awful old serge, Really, it’s dis- | ia about to massacre twenty or thirty | their charges knew just What they | had never left, ! bags of alive j OHN i} ae a | J gan Hits From Sharp Wits graceful!” |roughnecks to get up an appetite for] could do, Often T have written of the great) In the art fightere the armies of 1914 have pretty nearly annihilated one another, It) “Non Indeed!" said Mrs, Stryver, gi ly. “Besides, I'm just wearing this’ sword." We know the rest; the hero Is atre In the shape of @ y are made of white vel- “in the brown tones and vttractive They are $1 edlework sections «are the little folks there are novel a later yield of men that now furnishes the ghastly diet of war. 2 bean i it 73 cent They are o last Ja Pees oes te Freee : ap-|. This old stuff about the “trusty |{mportance confidence between pretty boudoir jackets of Terry |i ii With painted destine ae’, Bet reety And Mrs, Stryver gazed at ber/lunch, The sword psd all the WeaP-| iiade” isn't just a lot of words, but| mother and daughter—the mother so| cloth in delicate colorings, A ball of | hit) A Pe BC) f childrens | holes in. The man who is everlastingly talk-| that the argument ts ended.—Albany | Stout figure enveloped in dark blue ons in the fiction gam the real, straight truth. If you were|#cting as to INVITE such confidence. yarn and directions for crochetint a! filry tales and Moth rhyn } But a '®& about What He Has Done is @| Journal, | serge, the coat of which was lined| Woe look upon it rather as an orna-| fighting for your life and your swora| Perhaps, if there had been closer jace edge and joining the underarm Ly sited Riding Hood; Hits ae | team w considerable nuisance. But we hay se with the finest blue satin, and, niss| ment now, a4 something standing for) broke "you “Would have “just time [communion between this mother and pieces accompany the Jackel. When agli, Mond, Little age | one over @ Jot softer wpot for him than for the} Every man ix proud of the fact that,| ing her skirt to show that the skirt | old Ume War, the romantic and pretty |enough ‘to wonder if you'd paid the] daughter there would have been no completed this sell at $5, bur you opt verse upon the cover, | Fated A lad who is overlastingly talking about | whatever may be sald of his past, his| ' : part of it in the Middie Ages. ‘The! life insurance before the other fellow | unaway can make one for $1.50. rly ix alWays searching Johns What He ts Going to Do.—Columbla/ tyture ia absolutely unblemished and| Was"! lined, she wore « pair of very PMC of ny sword was the in-j punched you full of holes, —‘Then|. Yet, aside from this, the big need is | “At cents there ara attractive! for he pins might appreciate one Prcge tee) State. AA irreproachable.—-Macon News. expensive high kid boote of newrly ypiracion of the Crusader: the defeat. | Whoever id used | your’ sword “to| HEALTHY, OCCUPATION for the) vanity bagw of Drewden sill. They nf thse cre Linpilt cases. Witte The pect 4 sis a pa Hees poke the turnace fire would know | &if! who f . Y irror as the dare’ comparime the various. alsed tiful lo | Some people are really hoarse from] 7). 4 eee the aame color, Aes Bian OPPO WEY Danae ver me lthat they had ruined the temper ot| ‘The average parent’ of to-day ts BAYS BUTTON AGRE HOR SNR Ghe compar ine | cone sieiy having colds, while others are hoarse ey have gone to measuring and| “And this old hat, too; I've worn token of his ra ars the steel, It would spoil the day for|too indulgent, especially in the large, ' - ‘ from telling t friends what to tenrae Sanlen te Getaralns fel ef-/it till I'm sure people wonder if 1/ the svord, w 8 the weapon that de- = sat geen anak con blawe ey. C lea that sooner d + > itl’ pat tle : " tractions that y. ‘ Nia Ta oF later tha mother's teatimony would Dave Made @ vow never to take it) "As qovits family tren, the sword ia! Damascus and Toledo blades are|aventastorgetful of how imprenone| Betty Vincent's Advice to Lovers Some men's foolish idea of friend-|nOt be suMctent.—Naghville Banner, | off!" So saying, Mrs. Stryver put! older than history, Men made swords househo nd woree to all of us. It was) able the young mind is, are loath to| oe 5S. ship is to ry the unkind remarks . a 6 on ber hand-made straw bat of royal | of copper, the first metal they learned | Sung Ene ee vennty a that! refuse all pleas for pleasure, The) ‘M. G." writes A young man has[she is accustomed. Sh that were made behind @ friend's} The pensimist cusses and shakey! blue, and Mrs. Jarre. ne Ito handle; then of bronze. Some say | red Srepon nee pect | average girl then looks on life too! been paying me Marrlod Mesreuly: on what them, city. The outside world is full of at- iid we be r felt so] ttention for six bac e \they were made of wood and flint, | 8 two-handed weapon had bees F oe [seo no reason w oa back. al G hia fat when he naa 9 dodge an ay. shabby and out of style in all her} butothers claim these latter weapons | used before then, to smash through A Aa ee ROUnInG tp he re- months, He has several times asked| marry, hut eu 4) uhould not Alwaye the satisfaction of having|the finest kind of exercise for the log!" before. | were only flat clubs shicid and armor, ‘his was length |"Avhile every mother and. father permission to kiss me, but T have r¥ vet ain weding. You ae the last word is marred by the fact| muscles.—Columbla State. “L know she's just taking me around | The big difference in swords ts in Cana iananian adit wrbened t! must recognize that there can be no, fused him, and have also declined his| beth over age you are earnin, tu | with her so people will think I'm a| the Way thoy are used. Tho very old | ake the Spanish and Hallan rapier: | real development of womanhood with-!{nyitations to go to the theatre, as/%US" to support a wire, . nl ‘ s |acrappers relied on the edge, but the the hese OE nth offense and Out proper recreation and amusement, | {yitations te Bo to Me cumin it tl, Letters From the Peo le sompanion or something of the sort,” | Romans went in more for the point! | fesenee, Te Limes Senec OF snsh | there is such @ thing as overdoing it. Jove this young man, and | know my], AO." Is it improper foe Ithought Mrs. Jarr, dolefully, to her-| and what they did ought to have | 208 One) oon. a hundred ped You don't save a girl by saving her | jove is returned, although he does not |j) Si"l to allow a young man to put The Beckman Street Fire. arrival of the apparatus, If he failed Seif; “But at least Mrs. Rangle will/ settled the matter once and for all.) op ao later from SOME work, You take away |act as friendly to me as usual on the ind her waist, or to hold ; : ; : i ine ae wate "No matter how the preliminaries went, one from her the womanly quality that occasions when I have uttered. my To te Haitor of The Evewing World |e end a Gy, Re, Would have|aee me riding downtown in 4 taal) Toon iie Legionatien got started | They brought out the | dueliting |ghe badly needs later-—the quality of denials, What shall f do?” | when she is dancing, the In reply to the writer who criti-|ing to the Commissioner. Thiniiy, | 2. with their short | thrusting-swords |TiDering to @ needle point. Some of | responsibility. As Stevenson wisely| t¢ the young man loves you, why| (itll, 01° Kill only allows ‘auch cises the Fire Department's work in! you criticise the efficiency of the high ‘THs Was true enough, ‘The taxicab | bets on the result were pald off those prize fencers looked ‘like dunc-|°""Responnibility gravitates to him |Hoesn't he ask you to marry him’) ANTI ver atflanced husbands the recent Beekman Street fire: First,| Pressure system. Firemen do not op- was now at the door, and as Mrs,| Of sours ta ‘00 ere gy rd A ag ing masters until they really started | who can shoulder it.” j Then it woule he perfectly proper for | ; oe as to the so-called delays of the Fire) rare the puma of this high presmure Jarr entered with Airs. Stryver just about carve a man in two if it to work; then it was aiderent ‘They jdvien a mother falls to allow her| ue} 8 Be) 7 ind am considered i : Fey system # " pre cCoule ee atandine hao non front | fees Tate Vin Ady jbad an ¢ hs 5 daughter to shoulder some respon- 7 \plis! . Department apparatus in arriving at! not have been responsible if thors KAeW that, standing buck in her front | this kind leaves you wide open to a] “Ag to our chass after the very un- | sibitty every dey eho te” cenhatty Why Wait! Acquaintances, ( hagglated: by my the scene of the fire. People stand| had been a lack of pressure or water. gazing at the blaze instead of send-| The next tine you happen upon thwarting her growth as a woman H." writes I am twenty} young men but 1 donot seayerae e, ‘The yataghan, a curved |tion gives out and he stops long|On the other hand, the over-atrict three yoars old, carning $2) 4 week,| attract them. Yet a r-atric Iw room, but still commanding tae strect, | quick, straight jab. Asiaties still hold | popular Mr. Villa. If our ammunts Mrs. Rangle was observing her tri- | to the ed i fire and you see & moving picture ap- pelle iy | blado for slashing, has always been |enough, some of our cavalrymen will| parent. must realize that “all work | advancing rapidly, and deeply in love|to marry. should out Nery, mue! \ ing an alarm of fire from the nearest | paratua getting set up ready for ac.| WmPhant departur the Weapon of the Mohammedans, [go after him with thelr nice, straight, [and no play. makes Jill a dull gir.” | with a young lady about my own age.;advien from you” Slad of som | fire alarm box. Secondly, the Police| tion, wake yourself up, run to ‘ha When they arrived at (he first store, and to the end of the eighteenth cen- |sharp-pointed sabree, That 1s, if] To strike the happy medium in the|Her parents are extremely wealthy! Find some real inte Department co-operates with the Fire|nearest fire alarm box and send "st in life bes Department and when a police offiver| the alarm, Don't run away to wat Mrs. Stryver produced a $20 matrimony, Be ‘The | tury the Ottoman cavalry was con- they haven't left them in camp to|control of the child makes for real, and they object to our union, We sides thoughts of c driver had nc n sidered the best in the world, Mill-|gave weight, It i@ hinted that they| progress. The wise parent is not too, both feel that we cannot wail any) your simple, navural se discovers a fire he immediately sendal the movie men: atay there and direct| @*icaP driver had no change, of |Tiy Sharps laid it to their weapon, |would awap a dozen perfectly good |fenient nor too lax In placing, some longer, and lam sure that In two or. society of young a it when In the in an alarm and helps in every way the company as !t arrives. That'g| Course but it was the way they came tear- | swords fora reliable, old, single emsagn | sense of responsikility on young, three years I shall be earning enough | later you probably wilt rem or } possible in saving lives, &c,, until the your duty as a gitisen, CA. M, “You pay the uagn, my dew,” sald | ing in that did the trick, ; 44 Colt, vai Jsboulders, lto support ber ja the style to which! mate, nd yous 4 t

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