The evening world. Newspaper, July 5, 1916, Page 14

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nae enn Te | The Story of Our | Last War With Mex By Banerott Taylor AFTER. Peace Terms Ketused we “ mm # ae 1 Pew how i , UC BACK ON THF. JOB. f. iting week of chert to the Menica + the American fiag end celebrating @ sate Bot pecesariiy sane | { July, some five & e * « Yorwers are back on the job agen today . Muscles sore, digestions duworderd « elite dim ! Even though Furopean petions are in death grapple and t Upited States Government i marting troops the verge of war, most of New York had to get up att rch morning, crowd wabway ond BM. 1. trains and rerume the war ! N _ wine per cent. of hile bumdr prosaw anywe ” , daily grind that inrivts on dragging u ‘ er tof greatest eveuts What interests New York most today ‘ w and after having taken possess the paramount question is w r during July Aug 1 leave & garrison at & te Tre an city, a man will « } a juite @ ariier authoria every day | ¢ offer thenmely ’ such number of Me H slop work ata istead o clock ‘1 «© altere y during oy fornia a ablish ¢ summer, Many retail establishments are sing their doors half an tuents therein, at tions that may f it may be ¢ With aafet eure the people ¥ / oo . ee m lane ? 3 that id in the Wish and de en of the Unit ; a | free ¢ roment win v to that whieh exta a tnotitation Col Kearney sent detachments of volunt ae Director William HI, Allen of the Institute for Public Service, Ve trail from Fort Leavenworth, and by the last of July “the Army pa Went, an it was called, ar Hent’s Fort, on the in @ letter to Evening World, tackles the subject in @ practical | River, It numbered * eirht companies of Unit manner, calling on employers to make comparative studies to deter creat of volunteer infantry aad mine net results | ‘ol, Kearney on July 31 New M At When we can combine Ith and with efficieney and | nwith ond joretines tht onomy, work will become both ple profitable | The country under the rule of Armijo, the Commandante —--2 oe - —— the population a mixture of Indians, New Mesicans and A Indians and New Mexicans were little more than half-etvil! Four buadred striking “Teddy Wear’ makers returned to treacherous and cowardly, They prepared to oppose the American . work to-day 4 the Stuffed Toy and Doll Makers’ Union | With about 3.000 men and na pingon of artillery Armijo established announces that Col, Roosevell’s recent political action had PB Becca mon) Eine te ee ‘of Verna on Aug, 16 : wotbing to do with the cane. Kearney assembled the people in the plage : ane them to take the oath of allegiance, When ; 5 ok possession of Banta Fe, G FOLLOWING GRANT'S TACTICS. N THE grand tactics of offensive launched the Allies against % the Teutonic powers there is analogy to the conditions and opera tions of 1864 in our own Civil War Grant then began to hammer the Confederate forces ceaselessly and relentlessly at every point, pushing slowly, steadily on despite enormous losses. He could afford to sacrifice two men to the enemy's one, for behind him there were stil] enormous reserves in tho North | to be drafted. But Lee had drawn his last man to the ranks. | The battle front in France to-day is like the fields of Virginia} this time tt was learn that Armijo had abandoned his position canyon and disbanded his force. In short, New Mexico was occupied opposition and civil government established, (To Be Continued Friday), Few things are impracticable of themselve | and it e for want of age | plication rather than of means that men fail of success.—La Rochefoucsast, | ——— —$$—= ° ’ ° Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland ' half a century ago. The strategy of the Kaiser on inside lines is that oe ee ee ee ee ee Te. of Lee striving with heroic efforts against a tightening coil of superior VANE aver #0 0, Lacenton ot Gary seient Oi amare ay § fi 6 8 8 be ai “Gee! But the telliows in the office will be sore when they find the pile & builder of alr-castics and ® magnate of imagination. f On the Russian front there is vague similarity to conditions in aM Mniiniahe< hedisdibeg ISIS terca enn | Youth: The faculty for enjoying a picture show, a trolley ride, an ice the Mississippi Valley. Brussiloff may prove another Sherman driv- *| ’ A 4 |¢ream soda and the chance to hold a girl's hand. ¢ e ene, Pa q . oy defy) 4 . , : . H ing s a — ip “ enemy's countr, Or, perhaps, the J ust a W ife St ories of St ories | 1 he J arr GREE ean GiarUs eul wl a deers Iga icn a einaeeeee om theS | rand » in far off Asia Minor, of whom we have heard little of } ] Di ‘ ) : tay i F il subject of women he is often embarrassed to discover how many lovable 5 ’ ‘ > ‘ % 5 a6 , j late, may be on @ March to the Se ( er lary. Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces amlly Oued bars kek P eee enneneeree 5 » ’ i When the brilliant leadership and superb fighting ability of the wii ’ mons By Albert Payson Terhune | South failed in dashing strategy of the first years against the blun- Rdited hy Janet Trevor, hd : th Occasionally, a man calls on a clever girl, just as a form of meat By Roy L. McCardell. % - Courriaht \ Copal’, WW, by Phe Vrwwe Publishing Co, (The New York Kveaing World), Copyriabt, 1916, by ‘The Press Publishing Co. | gymnastic practice, to brace him up so that he can enjoy th dei weigh umbe nlimi . r »N ’ ‘wh . wrright, 19 hues Rybliatl & DP . y the ene: _ dering weight of numbers and anlimited resources of the North, there SIDI NAAMI THE HAJ (From the Ardbic). ee Ae tee |soctety of some fluffy little nonentity for the rest of the week. followed the slow, crushing processes of pounding and hammering all a uthorsh It has been told and re EREF'S a letter from Uncle I r 6 Ball! eer 6 it in twenty-four hours ha Wir ig thoteand eat. “Phere. are “H Henry," said) Mra, Jarr. along the lines-t! tually brought Appomattox, |S} since 1 ciosod my diary. 1 had 1 he gure Us put har ae fama where great, acandai| ‘The man who insists on being “master In his own house” usualig It took the North three years to reverse the tic The Allies, | been sitting In the deep ar ) ‘ down there at Hays Corners where | hasn't enough energy left to be more than seventh assistant clerk at the after two years, appear to have adopted Grant's tactics. chair in our room listening to Ned's Ib] NAAML THE HAJ sat in the eastern gateway of the city of |), lives, he says, A row is being| office. \ years, aph i hii labored breathing, wondering what Hagdad at the hour of sunset, : mada about well-to-do! people wand: | ; he would say to me, or 1 to hin, And great peace was fo his heart. For he was a just man.|ing their aged relatives to the poor-| One comfort in having a husband who insists on wearing a beard of It is & most opportune time for Congressinan Bennet and | When he opened his eyes And the just are ever at peace. house, and he wants you to write | smoking an old pipe is that they will surely minimize bis temptations Commissioner of Immigration Howe to be scrapping over the it was after lunch, which I sot He raised his eyas und lo! @ stranger was entering the city through |#0mo letters for him to the County | 0. oiner women. contract system of feeding immigrants at Ellis Island. Guests Pea eracat eet eee mast UY? [the Maatarn Gale aneee Be La ander pa peomale.| “Ti | tro akfan old Mort i elp hin F,) at the island are so few that the two contestants can try out eenes Pp ip FE AB sot si: 4 And Sidi Naami the Haj spoke unto Pe pull souriagealy, shiv bot ia Bee | Sometimes you meet a woman whose idea of “economic independémes® their rival bills of fare on each other, was worse, and that le didu't « } “Peace be unto th oh, stranger! am Si jaami the Haj, and “wh: val!” ol ‘ pShicladaallaabit i eres, An : hat eo didn't even ink Ths eaIGRHIA Te NAST ETRE ANAM TGS PAAR Gee T kak Phe Bienes | ‘Why. the old rascal!” cried Mr, consists entirely in collecting her alimony regularly. At 280 our Apartinent was ax quiet lings of Allah upon all strangers?" Jarr, “He was Overseor of the Poor | — ' TWO MONUMENTS. |as any New York rooms ever are. 1 the stranger made answer and sald: ten years ago and was dismissed on The love or hate you see In other people's eyes is usually merely the fe Then, ws for the twentieth time L re ‘Greetings, oh just man! fam the Plague,” charges of starving the inmates of the | reflection of what {8 in your own, N WESTMINSTER ABBEY stands an ornate monument to a placed on News hot forehead the Now the heart of Sid) Naam! the Haj was sore troubled, Yet was he | county almshouse, | British sailor with an extended account of his d Is of valor, | and What he re RC or e% . ‘ : not afraid, Por the Just know no fear, “You shouldn't talk that way about | » | " td 2 Snot! His sorrow was for those whom he loved and who must suffer from this | your relatives,” said Mrs, Jarr, get | Facts Not Worth Knowing tin my face I long since forgotten, The marble of the mausoleum outlives his! know, but almost instant! > Wherefore he spake, sayin | 1 . + ow, by mt instantly bis Lids | visit of @e Plague BArOrOTS “DO. SDOKS SAY IDE ting up and closing the door, “Ger- worldly fame fell and he wave 4 ttle sigh “How many shalt thou slay, oh servant of the Most MHigh, ere thou | {hide can hear every word you em | By Arthur Baer St ‘ ‘3 1 had a swift movement of com |loavest the ety , pat ri : Copyright, 1916, by The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), In the little summer chapel at Quogue, Long Island, there has | mswion through my pain and humilis ‘And the Plague answered him: and she tells everything she knows to CIN pith the hands while ’ ‘ iled 1 blot k ation, TF sat on the edge of the t hall siny slg handed: the Mrs. Grimley girl, and Mrs, Grim- ABING motions with the hende While eneaving Over the FAME { , been unvei a modest brass tablet bearing this inscription: and beKan NodG thick, onward into the city, whence presently arose | ley’s gitl tells Mrs, Grimley, and Mrs, about as useful us taking a pair of oars into the Sahara desert, “Alfred Thayer Mahan, 1840-1914, Rear Admiral United States ‘let Lone hore | eens the death chant, und the noise of women who wey Grimley tells everybody.” cain Navy. Great among nations as an expounder of sea power, Greater |rible momen the day, | enue plague } Hale Apees ADH UNS ROBIE GF Las StrIOKen “Well, it's the truth!” replied Mr. When drinking coffee or tea the people of Tokushima, Japan, find a epoon a i‘ 4 , A when it seer 1 could pee wmentatio: J Be . Sarr. i ok: ; in the Kingdom of God as an oxample of a Christian man. touch Md again or al |? es And Sidi Naam the Haj covered his face with his |” a’ jot of things are true,” said Mra. "Ch more ebictent than chopaticks, } r Which would you choose? low him to touch me, A man von » and wept with them that did weep, For the just ever share the sor- ee ager : an It a you wider Urunieniiess "A Joko at the | row of others Ante bee He tae eens A Brona genius has invented an elbow adsorber for use in subway fome. baa, - one | Worst, Hut a woman ean't=feel tke For three long months the Plague abode within the city of Bagdad, pagel It te strapped to the victim who is about to enter the eu } Hits From Sharp Wits that, “She ie disguated, ale Is angry, | passing usiaven through the atreets and among the Hazare and into the [shortcomings or the shortcomings of | 1F {# straphed 00 thy visi im wna le te Dway in rush Roure feet hot h of ap it ‘ whe tn horribly atrald of the effects | natace of the prince and the hovel of the pauper “| your family. Besides, Uncle Henry ad wi 5,672 f twat eo. Shenae fovetan fe ie a i nace spend pre J Couns pg eae Pa rgeyrs | And ever behind him as he went followed the singing of the death song | always denied the charges. He says — H mal ‘seabauranes’ trem’ tas omaehcinde ake NIM they | spect . jand the hot tears of broken hearts that make easier the passaxe of the dead | he treated the Inmates of the alma- About an average of one out of every some inhabitants of Cardiff, Wales, } that “the camera docs not lie, se 6 Yet she while to Ea Semme, * house as well as be ever did his sum- part their hair from the front to the back instead of from the back to the bany Journal. The most gloomy pe: trembles. tas Latro Sidi Naamé the Had, alone of all in Bagdad, could behold the Plague with " ’ ie on wile Y person in the mer boarders. front, { bus 8 country ie the one who te waiting Neda hair, And whe ponod bis | mortal eyes, since it is given to the Just to see whe proimen are blind. iyi ie Glee Ege h Sinks aaa! Often when we see some woman] until he can Kieet all of bis wcqu eyes the Recond tity Hogan te ‘And Sidi Naamt the Haj alone made no ontery when at first the death That may be true all sight re 3 areagues coddling # lap dow we wonder what! ances "Is (his hot enough for you?" apeak, TP listened w bre song Was chanted in his own house, plied Mr. Jarr, Hut summer board- @ Good salary and pickings." | that's why he wants to get charge she'll do if she ever Kets to heaven | Milwaukee News. Mollie, let me tell you about it,” vor he knew that the Plague Was the ohosen messenger and servant of [ers can leave If they don’t Ike the “It won't hurt you to write him alof the poorhouse again. It would With nothing but children to amune see he begged ; a {the Most High and obeyed but the will of Him who sent him forth fare. The county poor couldn't, You nice letter," persisted Mrs, Jar, reduce expenses and be #0 ol hort—Macon Nowe Miladi saya when two live All She Arat part of the evening hs dt vd (range doubt crept the he. “The right way 1s always the bei ‘ 8 8 sheavly es ¢ Mit of thom lives an|he went on) wae with w woman Yet as the months dragKed by a strange doubt crept into the heart of the | know what he did when he was ex- "The right way ix always pest /for Aunt Hetty, because there are! leftovers.—Megiphia Cx terribly Wt was @ sudden eall and | Just Men P pecting @ Visit from the members of Way, Be frank with with people |iot of old women there who hat f ie 1 ho time to phone you. At Anil it came to pass as the thint month was ended Sidi Naamt the Ha} ing Grand Jury who were investigat- and helpful, You could promise to} rheumatism worso than she has, 80 { on nee =] came, oR oa rtler Anan bad been ex. | aat again In the eater Ree ne et ta ain le head and upon | Me the almahouse when he was Over. do it, even if you didn't. Promino| you soe he ia thoughtful!” é Fro m th e P co ple ly, clever and comfortably of, his Searde For all whom he loved lay dead, POM) goer of the Poor, don't you? Why, to intercede for him, mean, Couldn't) f should say he iy!" remarked Mr. ; 7 A Subwer Service ( aint. Jeverything and everybody Ve for Hie lifted this eyes, and lo! he beheld the Plague departing from the city, |h® brought a boy from a neighbor's you? : Jarr, ‘The old villain! What else } ‘To the BAitor of The Evening W , ee, oo ee eens t cog ‘And Sidi Naam the Haj spat upon the Plague and reviled him and cried | Who bad the mumps and exposed the “Do you think that's the way tol does he say?" . f Tt io & splendid suggestion you make] 1 wish to call your attention to the| f wasn't. playiik, Wilh Ned's hain |OMt upon him in we athe . inmates to ft, and when they caught ae Far Ms Jarr, may Ho says he wishes you to write to to The Evenisg World that the city | OUlAgeoUs treatment of passengers now. L had Teached for hin land a Thou hast lied, and art unworthy to be the ser. | it he showed them to the Grand Jury Us the best way,” said Mrs. Jarr.| the editors of the city papers to sto} ful record of resulta wo as | 6 Fourth Avenue Subway since | was holding it Uxit under tie cover |} How the Pledg t vant of the Most High! Thou didst promise me thou | ang claimed It was tho fattening ef- ra, Stryver gets her name in the| printing so much about ‘going make @ careftl re: © economles Ww instituted by the | ing Was Fulfilled wouldst slay but six hundred in the otty of Bagdad, | ects of the good and plentiful food Papers on account of her charity | 10 the land.’ He says the clty men to show whether cily employees pay) KT. in the consolidation of the Sea When I came out of the ho Tenn A, behold, throe thousand have died!" i, who are | 49 no houne ; i 7" Malia wate altace froin tannin ailures in the cit Then answered the Plague and said unto him he served them, work, anti she gota letters froin people failures on the tari i ww doctors anen't “phe servant of the Most High cannot speak faiscly, And Ihave done| “Well let bygones be bygones,” that would Pring tears to your eyes.) wan't to pay to learn farming, and 1 by that sort ., x 0 = - id Mrs, Jarr. “I don't see why you telling of their poverty and mistor-| when he does get one who will work according o my promise, | Killed but six hundred, My twin brother, Fear, | 8! yy “ t some of us are not | Mew the reat” i are not generous and kind-hearted tunes, and she does a lot of good) for hts board they want to te abed their way by the work they do after! Keach and Weat End roads 4 o'clock in the summer time. If your To-day | spent ao extra 6 cen puggestion is acted upon its benefits| transferring from a Hay Kidge will affect @ vastly larger number | nue to a subway train te than the total of city office em-|1 waited five minutes fo: worse wUnued, "L was sick with t oie OWL LK 1 to be aft ving, wholly callow a vad had nothing i 5 . in Uving| tll! 5 o'clock in . , ployees. seven nutes for an e to eat and hot Ree. aN Hay peel {and aren't willing to do favors when sending them books on plain lving| says, too, he had M4 nee a s It ts not at all hard to belleve ‘hat | expr consisted of two Instead | singe noon Sel went into @ restau When we left the place we}sobbed, “i can't help it, 1 shall love Nhe favors cost you nothing. Uncle and high thinking—she's a regular! to work for him, and when he woke in many private offices stenographers | of three, crowded to the i + and alll pant, and as luck would have it there to another, T Vin rathor | you whatever you do, But becausn [| Henry is 80 anxious to get the posi- apostiess of cheerfulness,” [him up at 3 in the morning the man “ and clerks and other workers are ac | Bay Kidge passengers had (he pleas-) was a bunch of fellows LF hadn't seen | tarry about What happened.” love you I’ ing to suffer so d !-| tion, He's getting old and should be “I dare say," rep! Mr. Jarr, dry-|¢ame out with his grip packed, ky Saatly doing less in seven hours of|ure of crowding in and standing. since graduation. ‘They urged me tol” there was a pause. Ned said, Ina | fully if you do the things that stain |.) é ly, “What else. doa Unclo Honey | iD be Was going somewhere tor work than they would do if they gave| Reaching the last siop, the outgoing | join them and | seed the chance to}jower tone: l guess thats all, And{and soil you, Darling, my dar! humored, LP Ok Alek . cle Henry | night." @ix hours or wix and a half hours, passengers were mob! the ins | turn my thoughts into another chans | guess lm ax rotten as you think EL] be good to my faith in you, Dor “I know,” replied Mr, Jarr, “every writ He's an apostle of Three! “You write Uncle Henry and Will you through your columns sug-| coming transfer passengers from the, nel | vewell, Pim horribly sorry, | strike at it again!” time he has to spend a nickel he Cheers—for himself.” him TH not only try to get btm ti gest that private offices also make! Broadway and Myre Avenue trains | “LE suppose t wan so tired that the if that does any good.” Never, 1 hope, Mollie,” Ne said | groans and says Ne feels sure he will “Oh, be complains about Aunt the poorhouse, but if he wishes try to get him in the county no one to hold the mob in| first drink went Turn your light on this and) way, | four yomy head, Any 1 didn't want much to! dropped ¢ Ty dumy'kneem beside the bed] And I'm going to believe that tg/die tn the poor-house, I guess he Hetty’s health, says he'll have to hire 1 ome comparative studies? WILLIAM H. ALLEN, i Then he whistled softly and Director Institute tor Public Service. give us relief, J. SMITH, | cat, cot yed wilh the fellows aud and kissed him, ‘1 love you, the end of this unhappy chapter, wants to die there as Overseer of the @ girl to help ber with the work, and out, » ‘ ; | ' i} Kit alae " eee Sse + eee Sete ame a Se enema ég

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