The evening world. Newspaper, August 4, 1916, Page 10

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ge ees er er me 4 The Evening World Daily Magazine, riday, August 4, 1916 , . . . . | ¢ CSRy Bord. Interested as a Sportsman «the. ByJ.H.Cassel || Stories of Stories APLISH ED PT J08RrR PULITERR ~—~—~—————w ewer eee or —— enangonneadiadin 4 j y asterpi , Ber et Ee halk Rees Fak’ * es j By Albert Payson Terhune | SQUARING THE CIRCLE, by O. Henry. ee eee t oR Me “at sant ane Coacene get ge Sa ree were ( umber Gangye,! . C ‘ 'e . ene erate Portal Union g Youre back the vepdetia bad started, when o member of @e ? sosccccsesesepempoccene OF Cee Fete wos ++ co vane msoonee OM Folvell tamily bed ebot BU! Markness's dog BU) Hartmape Jose seesaw seem ees 1 is eee eeeeerercewees® avenged bis pet's death by shooting the patriarch of the Polwell alam ‘OLUME OF... neon veseeees MO, BOPTD Afver which Ube ball was declared open And, oo far as cach family Ons concersed. the law was “off” on the other Folwelle shot Harknessce from ambush Harknesses shot Folwelle on the way to church or at home, Hate ren high. The dlood-feud raged om until in @ few years there was but one Folwell left and one Harkness. Bam Folwe!!, last of his race, vowed to wipe out the old warfare 8 @ single otrike "by killing Cal Markness, the only survivor of the hostile ema, This idea 414 wot appeal to Cal, who wae of « more or less peaceable nature, Bo the last Harkness vantehed from the Cumberland region, tee> ing the final Folwell guaning for bim in vain. Cal Harkness 414 not pause in flight until he reached New roe ae ‘There be found « job as truck 4river and settled down to a life of . tive eafety—tar from feuds and rumors of feude Pie When fam Folwoll | that the ently Sing WHAT IS THE P. S. C. DOING? * MMENDING The Evening World's stand in defense of the public againet the threatened tie-up of the city’s transperte- tion eystems by striking etreet car employees, formes Btate Genator Anthony J, Griffin writes: Harknews had escaped him he was furious, He and @ Search, inquiries FOS ie a account with one ultimate killing. . Fully « year had passed before fam heard that Cal was living im York And thither, on murder intent, he prepared to follow, Donning Sunday guilt and packing @ meagre carpetbag and stuffing a rusty revolver into his hip pocket, Mam Folwell made the journey to civilisaties, On the morning of Bie arrival he thrust the pistol under hie coat and stuck a bowle knife where he could get at it with one twist of hisarm. Thee equipped and with the feud-hate hot in his heart Be began his search of Manhattan, ‘The wwirling ofty caught him ep and epun him about in ite thousand rugh- ing human eddies, The crowds dazed and etupefied him. Gam was jostled and shoved and collided with. The roar of traMo deafened hig silenee- they injure each other to come extent, bet Darden of the acoustoined ears. Fe ee eee ee ee 5 notes in the whole worl H Joos, the inconvenience and annoyance have te be berne by A traffic oop jammed the dissity loitering mountaineer in the rite with the public at large. a nightstickh. A speeding motor-car grased one of his shambling knees, : How is the public to be protected from this injustice ? hhansom's hub bumped him, and the hansom's driver ewore luridly at htm. . Dreath, Cal at a glance recognised the countryman A Face es hia eworn foe and relentiess pursuer, Gam Fol- } inthe Crowd, $ ll ° Being unarmed and taken by surprise, Cal hest- tated, then came to @ dead halt As he did so Sam's distracted giance fell on him. Here in this thundrous and overthronged city of strangers was ene familiar face! Bam rushed up to the irresolute Harkness, and, ecising his hand tn anguish of homesick cordiality, oried weloomingly! of + That in « etrike or lockout where traffic fe impeded and the = | peace and comfort of the public molested, any citisen ie entitled to E } ‘eet forth on a certain day the nature of their mutnal grievances and | FEROWEY: CAl))” Cah STO: GEE to E08 FOr" a | @mpowering the court to pass upon them. In the meantime, by the | 1) terms of the citation, both parties are enjoined from the commission ae Risybtehtge Pera divoetice- al self-control, these three lead Ufo te ez omission of any act tending to disturb the statue quo or interfere | cee : s with the public peace.” ‘The measure was opposed by Mr. Gompors and other labor leaders and never got beyond s third reading. This despite the fact that ‘ Genator Griffin received letters of approval from individual labor men j who particularly liked the provisions of the bill which officially reo ; @gnized the “union.” : Y Ae Mr. Griffin points out, while in the present street car atrike The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell q the railroad officials take the stand that it would be preposterous for them to allow their employees to organise, in New Zealand and Australia the organisation of employees inte labor unions is encouraged upon ¢he theory that it cre- ates @ definite responsible factor in the place of an trre- | Mrs, Jerr, “He raises flowers and | vegetables and chickens on the root, and bis family spend ell their time there.” stout feminine form did, however. “Who's up on this roof?’ asked the stout lady, “We live on the third floor,” se< piled Mra, Jarr, stiffiy, apare “Don't the neighbors complain to/ body stealing clothes,” sald the the Board of Health about his rais- eee eee eeeeeeererer> Just a Wife ing Sowers on the roof? eaked Mr.|dosen towels and some fine Jarr. “Ours would.” (Her Diary) 3) _ “Oure would noti” repiied Mrs.|/were people on the roof who Coperight, 1014, by The Prem Pubiishing Os. (The New York Drening World.) Edited By Janet Trevor | Jerr, ‘I'm sure I have never met | they lved in the house tf too, The Human Pinwheel. Gevelop concentration. By | more neighborly set of neighbors|member.” And the stout lady Vd her tance of ages we are naturally cen- | wrist, 1916 7 The Prom futiytiog Oe. ginoe I have beon in New York. They | anxious! Measure of human concen-; trifugal, flying off from our central ti Nee Yel SLVIIt. vy ore Dollars sponsible mass. Obviously, however, in the present crisis the people of New York .gannot look to legislation te save them from what threatens to be the worst transit tie-up in the city’s history. By H. J. Barrett. Ultimatums exchanged between railway officials and union lead-| Store and Stook Arrangement. ets seem to make the declaration of a general strike involving every | 66 I @ merohant sold his customers Women Who Fail By Nixola Greeley-Smith and Sense. | never interfere with us.” hold linen was Grying om the rail-transportation line in New York a question of hours only. festa agate aay ot eo alan Bice maerere 06 Be: |S faery Apel as Fa | QEPrEMBMA 18-1 had uch an| “It not enrine whether zon five oF | tines pect ' No law could be passed, no court created in time to avert the| stay in business long,” remarked one |@Fe more successful than women. jane ‘rom cutting up our best gown) SY odd experience thie morning. oo katie lpdeg ss peel ye ee eee meed not sive yourest! aay 4 incalculable suffering and loss which must fall upon hundreds of | recentiy. Wvery human personality has the forced by the nature of their age- Ten wetting 1 down sot because arm,” replied Mrs. Jarr tatty, “We A fong occupation to think ecatteringly |I consider it of any real significance, !n« @t you makes them neighborly, | have all the old clothes we thousands of workers inthe various actions of hin grat ity f thi] gm, sun porns mate |mins, een, Tr, Wrest att awh ieee bene u easyer) Se venue mateo lA 7 ar aya ie way usual means of transportation should thus suddenly be closed to them.| merchandise itself which keops a tending always to fy off from thelr Pings, which I jotiaicude of smell | anusual | axe nelatiborty,” onid Mr, Jerr, Reyer see you wearing anything ings, which left them no energy | “pa rather have them mind their] “At least they 4 central though! the minds of for great things. I woke rather tate, and assumed | or “s Bat byl pare to a to Albany or a Legisiatare— ne business. amt Lanai peri wale tre|, Every woman confronted unex-|tnat Ned hi Bo 1 didn’t OWN dusiness than interfere in mine!"| said Mrs, Jere, with tense 4 even were one in sessio Droper arrangement of stock eo. | mea tend always toward the cen! aly joa bad gone out. oa aphasia ; Isn't the city paying millfons of dollars for the main- sontial of their untverse—themselves, A man, edly wy she necessity for earning | nunry to dress, and as I lay in bed 1 retorted Mrs. Jars, “Bo, as it'e very tenance of a Public Service Commission whose special fumc- tien is to co the own experiences at first | warm this event at uy And “There are no cet rules governing |£0,b¢, sure, may take Uttle excursions |fear and resentment, She dove not | suddenty realized that it was wooks in Wh ae Go Oe oe to the realm of emotion, into love, the roof, We'll take a rug and a ¢the stout iady, fearful of ber this, But certain essential principles | into service for others, but he Meow Gnenie to wetsome the Gn8 | dings bad sopn oF dard Crom Pevy berosad ht always lop the | couple of rocking chaire.” laundry, wore only ecsemingly is me promptly te the ald ef the people whenever chance life offers her to develop the | rane, after the day Ned and I spent | o tim ‘ .} has his return ticket in his « - of pablic utility corporations fall te furnish the facilities they ae eee hormeh: | He is always perfectly certain of wt. Maa Newer whic Darwin welloved vo | With ber, when her baby was so ill, T) | “And e qouple of tana peso peeved hai fe den iphagd ag) at ane owe the publict conspicuous locations to articles] things and energies hineelt. bo the exclusive property of the male, jcalled once She hed ot returned’ (0, unset about the hottest place|stealing my wash this * Cn hae: ; a wom : week,” eald Did not the act of 1907, which established the Public Service| which would not sell unless seen, | | haries Darwin | recognised this has fought Bot marely her own battle, Liar b ecap bape telephooe her im- | there ia” - stout lady, | Mrs. Jere iguered * Commissions and prescribed their powers and duties, provide for “the aie aia taae Ta eas lino te he wrote in “The Degoent of, Man” sty see es. “uted” sues | mediately and ask her to come to teu| “We will not” said Mra Jarr de-| of ut asked Mr. Jarr if be hadn't | | - oh regulation and control of certain public service corporations” (includ-| expected demand should be favored | sessing every mental quality in the | cessfully the ¢i nehed, ord ‘ who fal railroad and street railway companies) to the end that the public,| with the chotoe locations, Then, of | Ame Perfection are put in competl- ORE etiure, Quite often pr dey supports these cia and yh employees, mieht be |SOUr#, goods should be rotated in| Sauss he will possess higher enerey, feeult of her best qualities, ti qi assured a due return of adequate and continuous service? renee With the seasons, “Much depends upon the particu- e i It the Public Service Commission has pewor under the lar problems faced by the individual her first free day. |ctsively, “In Palestine and all Orien- | told Der once of @ famity ‘As I was about to cal Central Ital lands the housetop ie where all|* stay abed upon such rare |Reard © woman's voice say, “Ned, | the people repair to in the cool of the| #!0ne as they laundered their dearest!” | evening.” reeverance and courage—qualities derness and pity which is the most) Just for an instant I was startled | tor |@pparel. Whereat the 7 universal expression of the maternal hi fr “There's nothing te tt but citmbd ed in him by, the, eee loNk |instinet. On the other hand, there | the tiv ng on at the ther end of the roof, then?” said Mz, Jarr, tn-|Shouted: “Well, you weep é E i rl id for existence and the neces- | f woman, quite as selfish it. hat | my elothes, madami* r protecting his family from |'s & type o! |Our @) ni it seems to me that! quiringly, “Wheres the rocking end diep< law “to regulate the conduct and management of common merchant. I, for instance, operate vival —paten, Jona Stuart ce re- ee sue aest, yulniens 8m, re eee Oey wie row | have ned that one oe ee es cae peared, a ‘ carriers and transportation companies and corporations” why medium-sized department store in a| marked in “The Bu yeotion of Wom: | which she tries to succeed, She jealous impulse to wait, listen, hear| So laden with these properties for! She was quoceeted by the janten, hasn't it power enough to compel the New York Railways town of about 48,000 population, I) most excels women are those which | Wants to be & business woman, @ ball- | more, lan evening on the root Mn Jarr led| "Hey, yusel” he cried. “Ott of that Ce or the New York and Queens ( Rall Com don't handle furniture, but do carry a require most plodding and long ham- room queen, a Lady Bountiful and a| Then I pulled myself together. No| in, way. “There! Didn't I tell you tin roof! The folks downstairs my raangady rifteicaly Kode ph a ' ity lway \* line of crockery, china and kitchen| mering at single thoughts"—prac- social pplitter, f..., B-. 6 eunae fue one F; ja wend Sad SaeONe | ie ‘would be ae het 00 @ bake oven?” complatnin’ ef 40 noise, ang B pan: a jeu! way that shall - arwin|man pin’ 5 je m: ret haftiet es told plese upon five pitty & let ware. This is located in a back cor- Realy Went Marre Mee in| 7 in all directions, but not accom. | “dearest.” The voice on the tele- said Mr. Jarr, as the tin roof was| Pert the seams Gnd @% the reef te ‘ epistoalh discrlans ny ner of the main floor, concentration would always be/plishing anything, nor setting any-|phone was not that of Ned's mother. | radiating heat most perceptibly. leaking! a That is the question that mainly interests the New York public| “I am inclined to favor this depart-| preserved in men by the struggle! where tone oe. Ped ind dove THsors ome. cree, Ned was re| "itt a not warm at all,” replied Mra,| “We've got @ eight on tte vost a4 apent the serious predicament—through no fault of ite own—now| ment my advertising appropriation | to maintain thetr famiven, | ite die the same | inadvertently overheard two words. |Jarr, plumping herself down im one| M4 Mr, Jerr, d and Los Angeles al , for a reason which One might not| Rot foresee that man would lose in| jand ale toe Denies i ah the never | @harpiy I clicked up and down the|of the rocking chairs, “It t# very 4 wheel, she whirls her!hangs, I wante en’ ° te roe R08 We. lla Oomnplenionere Why do sey push this Would be forced to maintain them- |, Like tte mitre’ a little momen: jgive me @ clear line, after that stuffy old flat.’ promised by sitting on the broad eop answer jp EES EE CE a tary attention by the pretty sparks | But suddenly—the man addressed| Mr, Jarr mopped his persptring| ‘DS .of the parapet around department? nd power she sends out, and then falls to the/as Ned hadn't spoken at all—I heard | prow and sighed for the coolness of wargely because those who re- und, t and forgotten, ain @ tense rush of utterance spond to my advertising have to Homd Women ORANG} ETONNE EPOR OF fore” Peat? inte Woman at the other end of | the aforesaid flat, but aid no more, |dow shades were ‘down, England created yesterday another Irish Immortal, thread their way through @ Iaby- the wire, “This chimney 1s a little wanm," “d ng, tt's been so long|remarked Mrs. Jarr, working her| ,.JUst then @ young man tn one of the { Chinese Doctors } tince I've sven you. T've tried to D°| chair away from tt, “I suppose it's| house thieves, ‘opened fire ou 3 , tried not to care, . x >| tted to forget that you were ever|the bricka, But I think it’s very| With @ cat rife. Mra. Jarr saye it Mr, Jarr tries curiosity. He passes 00 OX-)ioving you, Shall I never see you mr 8 Gree amination; he requires no qual-|again—never, never? Do you want rinth of aisles to reach their goal. a es DORRPRIIILOOIOOIOOPIODIOLOOA DS Ned, On! And during the journey in and out "1 they are very likely to stop and pur- Horse- Cars Letters From the People chaso articles Which DAVE CAUEDE| © wmmmnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnt thetr attention. structures in Germany, and so to| “Sometimes a ehift in a depart- ORSE-CARBS atill are operated “strate” the Prasels that they will ments Jooatien will do much to Lis in at least two American cities, not soon, ever in, prepare ulate sales. I operate a men's cloth- 7, ‘ crush their neighbor. Prepare to | ng and furnishings department and New York and Middletown, O., , - > “ e " Ned up your J . cae” dive headed wilh & , ing and furntahings according to the Popular Bclenco| fications; he may have failed in|to avoid me? I've called up yo F W h K of The Evening World's FREDERICK H. COX | Heike ta enter dependent: atorce,| Monthiyy ‘Tiny, low, short, and|Dusiness and set up as a physician. | fice & dozen, tines tn fie We week, acts Not ort nowing esponsibility for opinions published crete The Atmosphere 1s altogether too} mounted on a single truck, these cars In bis ner Profession he requires} out, so 1 took this way to reach By Arthur Baer in, in my judgment you would " i fominine, ..| Uttle stock in trade, medical instru-| you, and if you hadn't answered tho . M . there ¥ judgment yor Will you kindly publish in your] “Finally I changed the location of | Wer? built to haul about twenty per Ra neatoa inet Aine Yhone de should have given another Covrright, 1016, by The V'rem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) oti, we yesponatble for silowing paper the following example? 1! these depart sons, To-day they often are crowded| ments being alm unknown, notes popes Ned, speak to me"-—— OL use during the warm weather a Jersey City firm is now mone young Americans to seo any import-| would like to know how it ls done: | point to a st cut a} with two to three times that number| the Popular Science Monthly, 'T had been wildly clicking the re- | vturing summer weigh zi nt direct or indirect false statement |" ‘Three men sell apples, startin separate entrance direct f Acupuncture, as it 1s called, te ono} dyne4 Y, . Tacturing eight soup plates, lished in such columns of #0 Wide: pyeven for 1 cent. Ar has 30 anblen | sthoet Thus mon could cata he] and the horses are sorely pressod to pwns beable) celver hook, for I know that I ought read a daily as is The Evening|}}" has 10 apples, Chas 60 apbl eet, Taue map could enter and draw the load, of the nine branches recognized in| not to hear what this woman was ae — i jorid. Buch @ statement, I think,| They sell ramaider ue ape make thei purchases without the| When the Middletown horse ear| medical ecience among the Chinese: | saying to the Ned who. wasn't my A very stylish dress can be procured at a low price by faking through 4 that of Mr. Nussbai im, wh otl| make ‘same umount I dd ive pl 9 entire aah the | tne went Into bankruptey | eoveral it 1s of most ancient origin, having] husband, In despair I finally hung | gy awning and wearing the result, Published, in which he asks, vhy ' » ; amount and how ts it aulved? Dhaslsnd in my advertising, Those | oem oee, fo, WUnik dealer ANXIOUS INQUIRER, | departments are now thriviag.” he Pome, eUUmOn:...eemmmead ght It} been in use from time immemorial. | up the receiver, but not before I heard His profits have been more| There are 837 body markings to be| jung up tka other receiver held by than 300 per cent. a year, and if hol learned; every equare inch on the| the silent man, were to pull up his tracks and sell|human surface has its own name,| Wher I went in to breakfast Bertha “add another y of bloody warfare ‘te no purpose?’ Your readers should be reminded Briet and 4 fagpole should be always higher at the top than at the bottom, 4 o] |. Te the Biitor of The World: them and his equipment, he could re-|and some relationship to the tnter- id: “Mr, Houghton was called out — mnceren Ba you. PUDiiea sich & propos 1" oe Bo % te rfp ees Coal-dust mountains are now re-| alize many times his orginal invest.|nal parts, purely imaginary, 1s as-|en hour ago, ma'am,” Aaa rule the covers of a Book will be generally found on the outelde, Send profoundly believe they ahould| “Letters trom the feople'a cornet positories of wealth, says the Popu-| ment. signed to it. The user ts cautioned| And it was but half an hour earlier pul Ww Minue the war many weeks or|form for the body of a letter sent with | ‘8% Science Monthly, Formerly huge| Recently an order has been given) against wounding tho arteries; | that I had tried to telephone Patty x onths lo: for a “purpose” | a manuscript designed for publicati piles of culm or coal dust wore| LY the Public Service Commission of| hence he must know the position of| Kane. Oh, of course there are mill- Slapping a sponge in the face doeen't injure it, as tte features dounce mportance to themsel or | in hia paper if it meets with the cite | thrown out as ‘ | New York that the horse cars must|the blood vessels. By close study of| ions of other Neds; probably one or| rignt back into place again, ones: first, to gain better|tor's approval? 1 find your ‘Ques. #0 much waste, but! go, The reason for the demise of|a manikin pierced with holes the|two in this very apartment house, ethan ‘heretofore of.| tions and Answers” very: intercede | Pte pine, imtreduction of pulverized | these municipal curios is that the] Chinese physician leatns where to| But why am I suddenly remembering —_—_ ai-offelally; and, secondly, ! and instructive, Sitnoush, ery on ie burning Apparaiua for bneaey ploturesque equipment of 1860 cannot’ drive his needles, Parta of the body] the girl in the red cape who haunte Elaborate teste by intelligent solentists show that a whale docen'y ost ! ( y mi | C and improve the political hitherto been a questioner, HL AH. | ig utilising ite coal-duat SOS NAA ERTS GAARA OF FA AH ANG Seeesons oat, TAY RO Maree oe See ne C87 One ARG looked a4’ any damper than o minnow, a } *

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