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°s The Evening, World Dail — Op ener nnennnanrnrnnnonananeanane -aanonanasoen = “Remember You're My Boy!” nats, neti tte tei At atest tek t etek ts Met Ete ME ee ae ROTARLARHED BY JOReEH PITTI Metudhes Baty r1-094 pgp fy 2 Mess Pyniianing Comseny, Hae. $9 fe ; dent, 48 tee ‘ be ba ee WI) c? reer re 1 Tie Veenlng| Yor Pngtent sok ina vamtinewt aad S49 the Cotted Mae anata All Coane One Tow Holeme Monn in (he feternationsl 1 Union, coe ON on VOLTIME Acemcemmmes + NO, 20,044 STABLING THE BULL MOOSE. ALLING wpon the Progressives to mupport Hughes the Colone don bis best to measure up to thome etandarda of politicn apolar with which one group of his admirers has dently crediting him. A few uncompromising Progressives—the gn @arrenders element of the frustrated party—wil! have a bitter moment! over tha enlictment of their leader under the atandard of the Reputy liean nomines. But out-and-out Progressives ar vt the formidable phalang they looked to he in earlier days. Circumstances have con- vineed the Colonel that practical hermam enn sometimes appear tol better advantage slaewhera than at the head of a forlorn hope, “Tt has become entirely evident that the people under existing | Conditions are not prepared to accept a new party.” Mr | has probably suspected this for aoma time. It ia something that he is ready to admit tt openly, without endeavoring to mepand himself to dimensions calculated to conceal the truth Without Rocsevelt the Progrewive Party, whatever it dons, is east for a vanishing rola. The Colonel's views of the present Admin- | istration are the same as ever and more ao, His indorsement of Mr. | Hughes makes it certain that tha coming campaign will eee a prac-| tically united opposition fighting under anything-to-heat-Wilson | yranners, Tho President's victory will he the more clean cut and convincing, | been cont rd dine butenewer Roosevelt THE CARRIZAL PRISONERS. ARRANZA'S answer to the lonver diplomatic document which | conveyed this Government's flat refusal to withdraw its troops| from Mexico until protection for Americans has been assured may be delayed. But what about the briefer message which demanded “the imme- diate release of the prisoners taken in the encounter gt Carrizal?” |’ Does that call for no speedier reply by word or act? We are not at war with Mexico—not yet. By what right aro) ‘Americans held prisoners? ‘The de facto Government may need time | to frame its more elaborate diplomatic missives. But the specific fact that seventeen American eoldiers are held captive by Mexican troops! is one that calls for quick explanation and action. Much may turn for better or worse on the Carrizal affair. We know as yet little about what really happened there. If mistakes were made we cannot know too soon who made them or what circum- #tances gave rise to them. Between two armed forces of different nationalities, on the alert, suspicious of each other, collision might | easily be precipitated without due cause. But any self-respecting Gov- ernment would be anxious to examine and discuss such an occurrence reported in its territory. The question of the Carrizal prisoners takes precedence of all} others existing between this country and Mexico, to explain—not at his leisure, but at once. ihe oe SUMMER WORK HOURS. IRECTOR W. H. ALLEN of the Institute for Public Service has figured it out that the Mayor's order permitting municipal ¢ 1 The Closing of the Orpet Case }! Women Who Fail —— By Nixola Greeley- Smith —— It is up to Carranza By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publidhing Oo, (The New York Evening yorld), HE case of Will Orpet, who ts on No. 2—The Down Town Circe. trial for his life, will likely close| AWIRCE, daughter of the Sun, was) because they have been in your of- this week. Every phase of It has! the greatest of all enchantresses,| fice longer than you. A young been analyzed pro and con by bun- and her specialty was turning; Woman, particularly if she ts attrac- dreds of people Conclusions have been reached and swine. The woman who undertakes|@nts. Many chivalrous males will of- office employees to stop work at 4 instead of 5 P. M. during| many morals have been drawn, but! to be a Circe In business achieves the ergs show her Her. to do jos or A . there is one good old-fashioned truth | same results whether she plans them | ;utt. @ # POCRNErtyY OF & new y st w > r > city 8,000 he r helpers will be that each will warn July and August will mean a le mesh te OO of 18,000 hours of Work | iin stands out—that Aas stood the|or not. I have known a great many|her tban the other is “not on the daily for forty-three days—the equivalent of 500 years in time or @) test of time and that still holds gocd| women, and I have seen them suc-|level,” that he alone has her real year’s salary for 500 men. in this twentieth century period, | ceed or fail in a great many different| Welfare and advancement at ‘heu The highest compliment men can pay @ Woman is not to offer to help her in her work. ‘lhe woman who wina does not antagonize persons who want to show her how to work. She simply ignores their sug- gestions, Years ago a young woman entered @ publishing office when she was ‘nineteen years old. She received many suggestions from many different men 4s to what she was to do, how she was to act. One man in particular did not let a day pass without teil- ing her something about her work. He was not her cmployer, She had no particular respect for his Judg- ment and so she ignored his advil At the end of three months this vol- i i hat should come home view he fact that the city means to give leave of absenca|, Tt ls a truth t ae ‘ to every boy and girl, very early, and with full pay to its employees who enlist for training camp and militia | never leave there service, hiring other men to take their places, Dr. Allen finds the! I is a truth that has appeared in ' ver: girl no » average | or of personal charm can be made to 61 es nal wo! ours @ piece of unwarranted prodi-|¢¥ery tlie girl novel that the average | or of persona: shortening of municipal work bourse s pisce of ented yprod | schoolgirl devours, |do the work of brains, I have seen gality. It Is a truth that grandmother used| beauty, or what passed for beauty, We wonder, though, if the Doctor's figures don't look a little {to tell every schoolgirl Kraduate supplemented by the genius for flat- more formidable than they really are. ‘The amount a man actually| ! J8@ truth that, If followed to-day, | tery which counts far more, achieve ea ‘ * | would save endless secret misery and! a cheap impermanent success. I have accomplishes for himself or his employer during a working day in|yearthreak and would avoid early | seen young women shoot up lke hot weather is not always measured by the number of hours he is on! graves | rockets till the sky seemed filled with \* the job. In the case of desk work particularly, how much real “apeed”| ‘This truth in plain words 1, be-| the stars of thelr glory and I have are of the ma | lov atched them come to eartl ; can most men get into the last hour of a long summer afternoon ? | Wars'of the man who whiners love’in| wratoned chem. once t0: OMrIR: MmADt ert > your ear, who tells you that hea wants | useless sticks. Every woman who| professions or trades. And barring one only of many varying occupations {I know of no trade or profession in which the force of family connections 1 i 7 , unter uardian said to her peevishly, It’s a question whether, in warm weather, it may not he possible | you and you alone for his very own| works among men knows how this is/"\sa" had'a great. big. opportunity to pet more out of the average office worker in a short day, Why and leaves out the word “marringe’—-| done, She -has watehed with pale/here, It was up to you, and you must know yourself that you have not made good.” ‘The young woman was very inexperienced, very tmpul- in a word, the man who would take a | sco girl except by way of the altar. n the girl who used her eyes | effectively in explaining failure or | doesn’t the city keep tabs during July and August and seo? Fvery man who truly loves a wom- | competence, who knew enough to sive, She had worked hard and she Hits From Sharp Wits ‘an will find that way, will sacrifice! “What a stunning necktie’ just felt’ that she had Pleased her em , ; his own desires, will walt, if neces-| the storm of masculine wrath was|Ployer, But perlupe thie man, mvelt pon auertions there are two aides. [Persons who stond hy while others) sary, that all may be weil with her. | about to break information, Perhaps his frankness Asie sbatacal News 7" ee saa pale ? ‘There are those who will prateabout| ‘These things seem very crude when | was well meant and friendly and not i r Peer tie : the “freedom” and “fearless” expres-| written, but softened by the spell of /Sratultously vicious as it seemed to r ie And many a lass has responded to "i radi pi her, She was very young, very poor ‘A few peonie go to grand oneraline call to arma, Baltimore Amer: son of love, ‘There are those who | Circe, they do thelr work fora time—|hng ghe had a. mother and. little Recenee: er NOE Ne ire | cat, scoff at marriage as a happy medium/a Circa is born every minute, And |hrother depending on her salary, If eT oon News , ep for two people. where are last year's Circes? |it were indeed jeopardized by her in- efficiency she must find out. So she sought the head of the publishing | house and asked him if {t were indeed Carat) During vacation one can rest from preparations for it, and afterward, “Swat the fly and save the child,” says Dr, Woods Hutchinson. In former days there was an established convic-| Very often out looking for a new | T havo even heard tt sald that mar- | fob lace the sinecure in which rlage is the means of killing love. to re so) as sD 0 | ad faile asin tka wacntion tion that awatting the child was maore| 22 ome cases and many respects some fresher or more adroit en Wie Ses ee =o id. a a necessary for his salvation Neh. | these theortes have heen proved true, chantress has succeeded her. eee sid hice Opportunities are often seized by Iville Banner, Yet in the main, as a general thing,| ‘There 1s really only one way for al wwWho was it sald that te you?" $$. —_—_— there ts only one way for those who woman to succeed and that ts by She repeated the name of her tn- ? | would have love tn its highest sense —| hard, Intell consclenttc san ormant. The publisher smiled at the Letters From the People | would h hard, Intelligent, conactentious work, | forme | in the limitless Jove that seeks to bes ‘To du work well you must know , Mme. ‘i Rent rae Wi sen, | i T am sorry you took the time to =. get the race, WHY you do it, and you must study | gome and tell me this.” he said, "Un- Ge the Editor of The Evening World To the Palitor of The Evening World It is marriage. constantly how to do tt better, And! derstand once and for all that when 1 contend that the Prositential | A frien of mino states that If tha] For, even If later on the marriage | you must not accept too much help! Your Work ts unsatisfactory to this term constitutionally beging Jan, 1, [United States” wore at war, thel prog oe, aidhe) ditwal ne Srtia’ Meh muiicare hod office you will not hear it from any Le the netted hatwcon that date ang |Meney in the postal savings and even] PTOve & failure and the “two hearts /or too much advice, however well] One eise, You will near it from me Hen er renege rier rerteaerg [MCT ks belonging ta sitizeng| that beat as one" before have later| meant, You must do your work | "itis tone was Rrudging and ung! Inauguration Day is 9 the re- | would he taken, To what extent {| beat against the bonds that hind, i ever it may be as your employer | clous. But the young woman was re- tiring President to put in snape his |he correct? F. Kk. | is far, far better than going the lini it done, but don't have hai a| assured and pleased by it, From that office for his successor, the granting | ve ADs {love at the risk of consequences, {dozen employers, Don't take gug. | ROWE she Raid no attention to friend. of Buch period not being compulsory | To the bilitor of The Evening World is beyond cavil as regards the gestions from other peoplo merely success dated from that hour. mut merely politically ethical, My ead the Tril Wire and Bw woman tn the . | end contends that the President's |The Deluge” and “Pan Michael,” to friend contends that the President's | "The Deluge” and “Pan Mich | You have but to read the papers in term begins legally and constitution~ |iyenrvk Nie iM ho i ah aninat eiawice | If we hope jor what we ave not likely to possess, we act and think in eks 10 Kiewior, transl: realize what ally the day of his inauguration, | Jermiah Curtin, This is In answer agonins Marian Lambert endured | Y2 and muke life a greater dream and shadow than tt really is— ‘Which ts right? H. F, LAMB, |"A. D, 8's" question of June 20, 191.| dow her face lost its smile, How, 42DISON, See World Almanac, Page 116, ne W.H. Be lane wept out her soul on her lonely | ——— ed ; . on 5 opiter, awe Sahtewhen she looked for. | bd hergayly Bes Evening World Jo the Bititer of The Evening World: j pill wat night when she looked for-) with Wil Orpet, they were bothystacies, if he actually loves the girl Please advise me through eur ee inn coe vnnat which riamg| Ward 10 the possible results of her) young, the tie could have been broken, [tn a lasting affection, will find a way columns aa to how many and what) What ie the planet which rises) guiity love with Will Orpet rd another chance for each might] to marry her. are the tertitories 0! e United tdnigh mon ‘Ws |Ponat wealaha lactitea on wasclaee | LON Panle Any other way is welghted with woe Elates, 8. MASS, | pauaaile: 2AM BAS ANG nailed OB Fe) “Ae it was, the anxtety of both mustland danger, with despalr and often Bo the Faitor of The Lrening Worlds | Mas'eou tell ana (2 Vote ate uid hase been avoided, | sia raulized that the. lover she had| Rist to observe. ia that he who Tov tab el She wou ve eas Ing trusted to the full bad over - 6 3 hould ul feel a Will you please inform me which | neld this last apring 1s 10 he pation. ; chance for happiness, with no terrible) jes and fount another, ee vee MUM | Rey as he should will first seek th year OF Was just secret constantly gnawing et her; and A&A ML if later she bad found bergelf unbappy te the largcat college ap the United! a1!) observed ever States? MALLe” belador the one tim So it hus been world without end, be the marriage of @ day, & month or Every man, no matter how many oby . r @ year. 2 | those who came under her spell into tive, will have many volunteer assist- | | | By J. H. Cassel + ¢ Dollars and Sense. By H. J. Barrett. Filing Facts. | UCH sarcasm has been in- | M dulged in at the expense of filing systems,” said an of- fice manager, “and much of it Is de- served, For example: Smith sneak: furtively into Brown's office and re- marks: “"’'m carrying some valuable docu- ments which I wish to hide, What | 7 can you suggest? do her} “‘Put ‘em in my files, replies Brown, ‘Nobody ever finds anything | there,’ “One mistake often made is to seek to apply similar systems to utterly different lines of business, There ai of course, four radically different plans to follow—the alphabetioal, nu merical, geographical and by subject. And which is the best depends upon @ business filing demands, “For the average business of mod- | erate size, the alphabetical is, in my | opinion, the best system. For a con- cern with a wide and fairly uniform distribution through salesmen, agents, | &c,, the geographical {8 a good ays-| tem. “If the volume of correspondence becomes too great to be adequately handled by either the alphabetical or | geographical method, one ts forced to adopt the numerical. The numerical | 1s, properly speaking, not a different | method frofs the two mentioned, It! merely consista of an Index card file | arranged either geographically or alphabetically, which, In turn, refers to the actual file, which is arranged | numerically. Each card in the index file is arbitrarily numbered to corre- spond with @ file In the filing system. “Critics of this system object to the | additional motion involved, But, per- | sonalily, I believe that it saves time and errors where @ Vast correspond- ence is conducted. he fourth plan named, fling by subjects, applies to a purohasing de- | riment or some similar need, | No one except the filing hould place matter in the files. Cen- trallzation of responsibility is ab- solutely. necessary. She should bo equipped with a sorter, a miniature file, in which the day's correspondence is segregated, and from this portable! tile, she can distribute the matter| Without taking unnecessary steps." | e > OH, THAT'S DIFFERENT. Theatre Manager--You say that you have twenty-five ‘In your troupe, Now, before I book you, T would like to say a word in regard to costumes, You know this is a burlesque house, and we expect the costumes to be— er—limited, | clerk | Advance Agent—We dispense with | | costumes altogether, | Theatre Manager—But that would | Advance Agent—Ah, but troupe of tramed doga L book.—Gingel it's a wa wo | | | then begat y Magazine: Tuesday! June 273 1916 Ce 7 | RAAORC RAR A Ran OR eee inne sentient ee aee ashes ae we aes | Sayings of Mrs. Solomon d By Helen Rowland ee Be ee af Matrimany T° Prayer of & Niride wha aeeuarh wisdom and Nant that har dere fm, Wate, t ane thee ¢ at (how hast eranted ma tite hor of (ramon wherein T enall wale before my friende and mine enamicn WIR | Bia TROPHY hy my aiael Poe what protien i @ eamen Iaarele ander (ne eum and have not Therefore, 1 pray thee, m that f may hold him, aven an thow ha CATOW him! Lat me not sen hin fanite if he have any; mal shat mi open tah Wank nennae (howe eke he crmwned wttn att he worn a of orange bionsomet mma worthy that t mar deserve him, ond mada ma clever, that t might ma blind to hte fallinget For t know that in matrimony oniy the totatiy blind are happy, Atay me, pray thee, from the my flirtation and sentimental triumple bi to honat of them. folly of “conteamions.” and shateceveP heen, int me not be tempted For contensione are tke ante wine, eahiinrating for the moment, bat apt to | Likewine deliver me from eur Meationing him concerning his OWN 9: and hie staying out in the evenings For @ woman that « n que one with “that sorry fonling ” lonity! Otay me. t pray thee, from » bis comings and goings ations {8 as too much pepper in tha f0Up, too much horseradiah upon the elama, and perfect FAITH te the only leash whereby @ wife may hold her husband in check. Ye & little suspicion is a dangerous thing! ' Strengthen m: I beseech thee, t! tons and hide my 4 timental when he is sentimental and very, hat I may supp: a mine own inclinas rea, and conceal my whims, let ma be hunery whem HE ts hungry, sleepy when HE ts al: py. Merry when he is merry, sen busy when he Is buay, For next to not being at hand when she is needed the worst crime e wife ean commit is to be there when she ta NOT wanted Teach ma the legerdemain whe Annday’s veal and an “imported” hat from a caw lold peach basket. Let me not hanker after compl know that when he maketh me his wife it is the great ho shail ever pay mo and the LAST! | Strengthen me to meet his old flames with ple | raciousness. For ft {8 not his past loves but his FUTURE ones which shall be my tribulation, reby Tecan make chicken salnd from iments nor yearn after flattery, for £ ‘st compliment thag nt «miles and Let me not yearn after “Independence,” for I know that my Fourth of |Julys are over, and after the wedding day my TOOTH BRUS the only sign of mine “individuality” left unto me. Fill moe with humility that I may joyfully relinquish the heart of the may delight to let my coffee cool satisfied. For, behold, if I cater unto him in these things then wil! he yleld ante jme in all things of IMPORTANCE, and my days shall be long and happy jin the two-by-four kitchenette apartment which he, mine HUSBAND, bee stoweth upon me! Selah. Who gives a trifle meanly, t@ meaner than a trifle.—Lavater, | The Jar By Roy L. Coprright, 1916, by The Prem Pubtichti RS. JARR greeted her husband with a kiss, asked him if he had felt the heat downtown and “The landlord was here again to-day.” “What's the matter with that pest again?” replied Mr. Jarr. "The rent's paid, isn't it?” “Yes, the rent ts paid,” answered Mrs. Jarr, “but the way that man acts you would think he was doing us a favor by permitting us to live in this house. There's something suspicious about the way he acts. But you al- ways pay the rent so promptly and I know other people do not! Asa r sult, if I complain about anything I only get Impudence from the Janitor. We are softies and let everyhody im- pose on us, and as a result people who are behind in their rent and peo- ple who are no credit, to this apart- ‘ment house, ke some of the married couples whose quarrelling and fighting is something disgraceful, and the lan- guage in the airshaft, and the dogs nd the cats and the crying children and"—— “But what's the landlord calling now for? Have the children been marking up the halls with lead pencils or play- ing on the stairs?” asked Mr. Jarr, our children are never any for complaint,” sald Mrs, Jarr, ‘only to hear you talk one would think they were hoodiums! Of course he was nice about it and smiled like @ basket of chips. But, as I always said, those people who are too sweet to bo wholesome always have some mean, selfish object in view, or are trying to cheat you when they come grinning around you, rubbing their hands and saying "Nice weather we're having!’ and “For goodness sake!” ejaculated Mr. Jarr, who was not feeling in a particularly good humor, “will you tell me what it was the landlord wanted?" “Please don't speak to me like |that:* said Mrs. Jarr, ready to ery “T have all the work and worry of this house to look after, and T have to attend to a thousand things you should do, and you insult me wher I try to explain to you'"'—~ Yes, but I want to know what the id and be satisfied with the amaller portion of the steak; yea, that I and mine appetite wait until HB ie r Family McCardell’ Ing Oo, (The New York Bvening World), landlord wanted,” eaid Mr. Jase wearily, “He wants to know what you ine tend to do about the lease of this apartment for another year begins ning the first of July,” replied Mre. Jarr. “He saya he must have a definite reply within twenty-four hours, as other people are anxious to have the flat. and that he will hava? to raice the rent, and he certainly cannot paper the dining-room and paint the woodwork, although I tools him in and showed him the awful condition they were in.” “If the landlord wasn’t anzxtot about having us stay he wouldn't be coming around, He knows I am ready to sign another lease, but f won't pay any more rent." “That's right,” said Mrs, Jarr, “And what will your wife and family do* if the furniture is thrown out on the sidewalk and we are evicted, to starve, like the cruel landlords do with poor people in the moving pide tures? You won't mind the disgrace because you don't care, But I do f have lived in this neighborhood for a | Rood many years and I will not be humiliated or have my children hue miltated.” “Well, let us move then!" sald Mr Jarr, “Anything to satisfy you." . | "How can we move when the chile | dren are not well and Tam not feel- ing well, and you leave all the work of moving for me to tend to, and, any- way, there are no vacant flats in thie neighborhood, I won't move, That's sure!” “But haven't you been saying afl along that you wouldn't stay here? asked Mr, Jarr, “You say you don't like the flat—that we pay too much rent and the people are not pleas- ant “The people are all you," replied Mrs. Jarr, that landlord mean trick.” “What'll we do, then?” asked Mr, Jerr. ‘ “You leave that to me. I will at- tend to It, I know how to handle the landlord, I only laughed at him, [ told him we'd stay another year at the same rent if he would fix the place up nicely, and he promised.” Pleasant but “But Il know Intends to play us @ Facts Not Worth Knowing By Arthur Baer * Covent, 1916 by The Press i would take @ lot of crowding to Publishing Co (The New York Brenig World), get two horses into one horse collar, It 1s considered bad tuck to walk im between em automodile, Kangaroos and fleas use thetr back legs erclusively in jumping, the only difference being that spaniels never euffer from kangaroos, o Tt ts claimed that the inventor of travelling over a New Jersey road. Tf fashions maintain thelr presen mouse to acare shite cou Mbger, the scrubbing board got the idea while t pace tt will be impossible for eveme a=-iheinanilinaaiad ff feather duster or ag © 1 shall be”