The evening world. Newspaper, August 31, 1916, Page 12

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pa Sve eGthidy wird. Prrnenes POTAPLASIIND BY Jommrn PUUrrnen Detiy Recah Sunday by gre Pysee | orteg Cow “Put On | acensomenanen lene Maite erat en@ te Internelional ol Uwte M cvenes OON8 Ty NO, 20, WILL THE NATION SUBMIT TO IT? TARVATION, loss and stagnation are ecleduled to take their Grip upon the country 7 o'clock neat Monday morning unless the leaders of the railr brotherhoods are handed @ “satisfactory seitiement ’ Already the railroads are issuing embargo notiwor aff shipments of livestock and perishable freglt, Cities are ane taking stock of their food resources, Manulacturers are calculating how long they can run their plants if transportation ceases aud sup plies can no longer be delivered. Business men are dreading the die- estrous effects of halted trains and undelivered ma Wage earners face the possibility of losing their jobs. Families are menaced with chertage of nécessities | Calamity on this incalculable scale actually imminent—threaten- *ng 100,000,000 innevent men, women and children—for what reason? St eam!” eertictine. No railroad employes has been starved or threatened with Ctarvetion. No raliroad employee need be any the worse off —nor his wile and children--tor » continuance of present rall- read conditions pending an adjustment. No railroad employer has suffered or to suffering a thousandth part of the lose and hardship his union leaders are ready to impose upon other American citizens and workers, The situation is prepusterous, Is a whole nation to be trampled upon merely that an or- @anisation may demonstrate Ite strength! Not only should Congress act to stop this strike, but it should also take steps to impose heavy penalties upon men who use their power to alarm the country and disrupt ite business. a GERMANY SEES THE DANGER. MEASURE of the significance of Roumania’s entrance into the A European conflict is to be found in the quick shake-up of the German General Staff which involves the dismissal of Gen, Falkenhayn, Chief of Staff, and the elevation of Field Marshal von Hindenburg to the pusition of supreme command. | According to report, the von Hindenburg policy calls for the prompt transfer of German troops to aid the Austrians in the defense of Transylvania, In this view of the situation the hero of Tannen- berg appears to catch the anxious instinct not only of the Kaiser but | of the German nation. | On the Anglo-French snd Russian fronts the opposing forces have | each other by the throat with grips that time and practice have made almost rigid. But the strength of Austria-Hungary is not what it was. Italy and Russia have both shown that Austrian armies cun be made to yield to pressure. If Roumania with a fresh fighting | - gee force were to push through Transylvania, opening the way to @ great) (~~ wwewnrrrrrr allied drive into Hungary and Austria, Germany might well tremble Ellabelle Mae for her southeastern irontiers. D littl No wonder Germany wants Transylvania barricaded with all the, jOONttle thoroughness her strongust General can bring to the job. If the) Rk: 5 Austrian defense turns flabby, Roumania is in a position to lay bare eeu Bide Dudley es the weakest flank of the Central Powers to allied blows. HE Women's fie Bra ee oo el 1 ot Delhi hag decided to support ayor Cyrus alke: TROPICAL HARBORS. tn ie race for revslection "This i: fate of the Memphis and a score or more of her crew at San’ eae robin luseeutie canias Domingo is a grim reminder of the perils of harbors in hurri-| years more, since there te no factor cane latitudes. \4n Delhi politics that can compare in : ‘ | atrength to the League, The de- According to the early reports the water where the ship had | cision was made at a meeting held in anchored was perfectly siooth at 3 P.M. It was only an hour and; Husus Hall tast night in which Eila- # half later when the terrific seas drove the cruiser ashore, Admiral! Cane Deere ue pe penlanh Pond’s despatches clearly state that the Memphis had steam up and) When the meeting was called to wes doing her best to pust: vut into the open sea when her main steam | set psd rt Aaa i % Bact pipe burst aud left her at the mercy of the giant wave—perhaps raised |e eahca'e cinch thee acer Wolke . by a slight earthquake—which dashed her upon the rocks of the outer , would be favored by the organization, harbor. Tho gunboat Custine, by desperate elforts, forced her way Sate eller lulaanoyn ware PE NET out to sea and escaped, though not without smashed lifeboats and! yy ee Mienagh te eine crippled steering gear. | this world of corrow and atrife there Tropical harbors have often been the scene of such havoc and ary tines Pil we must all pull to- euch struggles—the most terrible in this generation being still the | pul ig he mea: Semocn disaster in March, 1889, when a hurricane accompanied by | voice half way back tn the hall, heavy tidal waves in the harbor of Apia swept two American warships, | Faint Set 4 reat demanded the Trenton and Vandalia, on a coral reef, where they were beaten | Mealy Soouny, tia Mina, Eke to pieces, beached the Nipsic and wrecked two German cruisers with | O'Brien. great loss of life. Of all the warships in that ill-fated anchorage only |, The Mayor held up one band, “Will the British Calliope managed to get up steam and beat to sea, {CORALS Pelee HEAR MARY SR08t) : | Mr. Cooney out?” he satd, > In the hurricane track, among low-lying coral isles, the harbor; 4 fight followed, in which the Con- loses its character as a shelter in the time o: Vise . | dable was knocked down four times, ; sg ; f storm. Wise the captain | put ne succeeded in aubduing his man who is never tempted even by a fair barometer to let his steam go! by promising to get him two ducats down. | to the cirous due here next week. It ‘was then that Miss Doolittle became | the keystone of the entire situation. [Sho arose and sald: you a poem Here goos:" —_—_——-+- —____. The New York Coffee Exchange changed its name this week to The New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange. No cream, thanks. touching The rhy original with the poet =e eas, follows: n = > : Hits From Sharp Wits ape etter How bappy we might be with our! When gossips meet, truth is me NG Wile wae ibe theories if there were no facta To-| crushed toeurth.-Albany Journal, a trey a at Mia W lode Blade. th-Alba th eh ae 8 Mosquitoes are getting so big now Me pleasant sou b-gs, ‘Phe best time for a man to acquire| that we shall soon have to change My sister's child, ‘Teeney Hickette, from insect powder to gunpowder,— SRO ae Aero en Charleston News and Courler, al vee wad By tel wa te des t gran for absolute truthfulness he has been @ long time dead, Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland Covyrait WW, oy Khe Hew Publishing Co (bbe New York Krenumg World.) HE Grst consistent optimist was Ananias. \T magazine. Don’t waste time trying to shatter a ma: can just manage to chip It a little around the edges. A man's idea of “diplomacy” gotten in her anxiety to know whether he is dead or alive. If “the difference between friendship and love is about two week: so strenuously on a stop-over ticket with privileges for all the little sido: excursions that they never reach their destination. A man who couldn’t be mangled by a woman's most incisive argument. can always be crushed by her dead silence. married man;" of the two knows its full significance. might know enough not to tread, | Divorce is a terrible thing, but as along with Now Thought and facial surgery. le Why Do We Have Two Eyes? \@ | ‘AUSE we have two eyes the B things we see seem solid and not flat, with the result that we can | judge their distance from us with fair \correctness, says Popular Science fonthly, Look through a window at 4 house across the street with one © closed and then with the other both ey the two fields see: fare combined an depth and relle: house with each eye house with both eye the stereoscope To endeavor to forget any one is the certain way to think of nothing | A man who knows bis own heart, my Daughter, is rarer than a fresh egy in January and more astonishing than a new joke in a comic vanity; be satisfied {f you to do just as he chooses and then go off and stay away from a woman until her indignation is completely for- then the difference between love and ennul !s usually—the next two weeks. The only road to happiness is via the Love Route; but most men insist bese Ob, yes, there {s a vast difference between & “bachelor” and an “un- but only the girl who has tried to play on the susceptibilities When it comes to marrying, many an angel rushes in where even a foc] rejuvenator !t seems to rank right When you look at the house with opel possible—an instru- ment designed that the two eyes are made to converge on a single potnt ~_ By J.H.Ca Hy] QL. a SRP OTE I pyr ree = rate Oo | iFor the School Girl’s Trunk * “I cannot afford a big wardrobe, | nice as her schoolinates. trunk, Does suit?” asks ono mother, A tailored suit is not an absolute necessity, but it would look dressy for church and many otber occasions. However, the sport coat, if not too striking, could do service for general wear during th ly fall, On {campus or for neighboring walks the sweater is a necessity, To wear later | in the season there should be a warm : bor dressy wear, with furs, if | 1s no taliored sult, one of the! > new dressy couis is nice. A separate coat ls a necessity to Wear with the | one piece dress, ‘The new capes are | decidealy comfortable and probably | will be seen in large uumoers on every coll campus, One of t might be suvstituted for the separate Oat, The girl will need a strong walking | skirt, and now that separate skirts are in such demand the shops are/ showing large assortments, A plain serge is serviceable and then there are smart checks and pretty plaids that are both modish and serviceable. ‘To wear with these there should be as many blouses as your purse will| 2 permit. For classroom wear there should be a few smocks. These have au ‘are very popular with the college girl. For dressy occasions there should be @ white or flesh colored blouse, which may be of silk or crepe de chine, One of the new plaid silk waists would be pretty, and then there should be @ few soft crepe blouses, either light or dark colored, For the small class affairs the pret- | tlest dresses of the past summer will | do. There should be at least one eve ning dress and for dressy occasions one-piece silk or crepe dress is neces- sary. | If laundry bills are a sideration select blo cleaned by the we n id ater of con- | that can be | here may be | closed. The bars of the window /and yet to see two different pictures. a furt saving by getting the crepe j{raine will cut across the opposite! If these two pictures represent @ jingerie which requires no ironing. Of house in different places, | Tho two| chair as it would appear to the right course there must be a dainty negligee fields seen with the eyes separately,/and left eyes respectively, they are and a comfortable bath robe. Milk although in the main alike, differ,! perceived as one solid object. petticoats are preferable to the white, 9 that must be constantly laundered. Lace trimmings should be avoided, as the average laundry pl lays speedy havoc with thes delicate trimmings “tli The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday. August 31. 1916 oe we nme The Jar by Roy L ; ‘ j ——————————ooooo r Family MeCardell » . * ty tee Pee Petes te (Te fee Tee 6 1 Own a dropped tote My doing that 1 decent etart ear © ty oe whet “ Nengie © ae le 6 moet owt of thie rene | sem mt eee be method,” eold Me, \e 1 dy everything | eae 6 tam oot gone ‘ we Mire Range, wut to be , ———- or i wae the wore our se oon oe the bat " ive er ** ait mele 10 been toe @ one ace propost. oie caly Impose on me thon, anyway 4 advieed Mr Nig on the self-pity etuft, Mea-|) departed ie « calm ond oe seid Mr Jerr, te ® patronteine 7X] tone you don't understand never have any quarrels of misuader Handings @1b my wife at ail y slemple, it you be forbearance ust because | sald I didn't want ev w& chu interrupted Mr 1 * eager ie ain all bie . on you tell why ee bo thine they are a0 plows piety ae an excune to raise @ row? Waea' it better for me to be trul ful end bonest about it, and if didn’t want to go to church to say jeu? Mut 1 spoke up like @ man—end 1 got @ bawling out.” “Let me toll you how I work it, and or thle you do th said Mr. wae Jarr, “Well, along about Thureday Mra. Jarr wil) see a preacher go by! or read about a fashionable wedding, and that will put chureb in ber mind, and she'll say, "We're getting to be regular heathens We never go to church, and (hats & lerrible example ty the childrea, But L suppose its ho Use talking to you, you wouldn't wo to church, no matter what Id way." eThat'e how tt all began with us,” muttered Mr. Rangle, “and now my Wife isn't speaking to me.” “That's because you were boob enough to say right out you didn’t want to go to church,” replied Mr Jars, “You should have aid; ‘Noth= ing Will please me better, my dear, Let us go Ww church Sunday." “What good would that do? 1 wouldn't go to church when the time came,” said Mr, Kangle. “But it would put off the row ttl the time came, and the chances are ten to one your wife would forget tt, or she'd be expecting company Sun- day, or she'd be up late Saturday night and wouldn't want to get out early to church, Anyway, always say yes to @ woman, especially in The trouble with you te that ome. 1 you bee were newer » Mre wien to her go in [humor for tomorrow night when we to take dinner at my mot Vi want Gertrude to ot ebildren.” and mind the children,” anid Mr, Jarr, Don't you want to go to my mother's with me?” od Mra. Jar, “1 do not!" replied Mr, Jarre very teal! y “That's always the cried Mrs Jarr “My | treated you nicely! Mhe never cared much for you, but no wonder, when you've always gone out of your way to affront her, What will she think \w she invites ua to come and take dinner with her "And bring so ua," mething to eat with interposed Mr Jarr “Well, I'm sure you don't begrudge ny taking @ #teak over with us and cake and a few other things? nm | You have such an appetite.” “Leave mo out of It, because I'm not going,” Jarr. “Why don't you got? Hecause It's MY mother’s home? Because she be- | longa to one of the beat families? Be- } cause she doesn't have friends who | frequent you to? | But Mr, Jarr had grabbed hia and rushed out “Where's Rangle?” he asked as he strode inte Gus's. | “He telephoned his te he was sorry about something and was com- \ing home to take hi t te the theatre,” sald Gus, “There's a feller that knows how to ge 1 mit bla wive. Why dou't you ex Mut Hecause 1 want at s Vacation how he does it?" » Irene Loeb Copyright, 1916, by The Prose Publishing Co, (TMe New York Bveming World.) the case of far-ahead propositions. YOUNG man writes as follows: “There are a great many moth- 4 ’ A Mother By Sophie ° ers in this clty who have raised a large family and who have bad « hard struggle for many years, and in some cases where there are younger T is time to think about getting the | children they will bave it bard for ] girls ready for school and college. | few years more, “These mothers work hard year in but I want my daughter to look as and year out without taking @ vaca- Please tell! tion, me what I ought to pack into her/their children and husbands are will- she necd a tallored! ing to see them go away for a while and although ip many cases and have a good rest and, in some instances, the children are even will- ing to bear the expenses of such a trip, the mothers seem to think that they cannot be got along without. This ts a mistaken idea in a way, be- caus as often happens, the mother {gs taken ill or passes to her reward lin the next world, her family manages to get along without her, “The state of facts in| my own home are as 1 have set them forth above, This morning as I rode in the subway with a friend of mine, I asked her how her mother was feeling and she sald, ‘Not very well.’ “She sald; ‘We' (ineaning her fam- ily) ‘have been trying to get her to go away for @ vacation, but she simply won't go becau: he thinks t along while she’ have insisted on my mother (an edu cated woman who knows what bene- fits come from a little recreation of this sort) going away for a couple of weeks, and will even pay her ex- enses; but just as I think 1 have persuaded ber to go, she decides not “These mothers are what some people might call old-fashioned, but I think if an article Was written on this subject it would tend to show them what benefits could be derived from a two or three we wtay at the seashore or vountr There is value in this young man's | &' statements, It is @ fact that many mothers get into @ rut—the rut of mother-importance, ‘They have gone along for @ long time, seving to every little thing, so that the! very Idea of leaving 18 appalling to them, They are afraid that things will go wrong; that the wants of If Washington I* George Washington had given his ene consent to the plans of the post- revolutionary Royalists who want- ed to establish an American kingdom, | with Washington as monarch, and anne enn, ; Uiowe they love will not be tilled; that they alone can keep things moving jin the way they should gon vee |. There ix only one person in the world that cannot be replaced—a mother. Yet too often does she take | her value so to heart that she sacri- | fices herself unvecessartly, She thinks she is looking ahead for her family by not taking the vacation that she ought to have, This more often is fear-tnought instead of fore- thought. Except where there are very small children, a mother should take @ vaca- tion just as any other member of th family, There is a considerable lesson to learn from the mother bird, Bho does not stay “on the job” all the Hime, while her offspring ure learning 0 fly, She teaches them; she hel, stays by them until they ca their winga; but she tn confidence and self-reliance by leav- ing them to their own resources oo- castonally, even while they are strengthening thelr wings, {t is all folly for @ mother to think that everything will go wrong when she leaves; and suppore a few minor matters are neglected while she is gone, the children will probably on just the same ana things will € adjusted, I know a mother who had never had @ vacation for eighteen years and the children were well able to take care of themselves, but she had a perfect horror of how the household duties would proceed without hi Finally this woman did go away to visit some relatives and had a very good time, and, strange to say, she had 4 much better time when she re- turned, aince these children realised FOR THE FIRST TIME what it meant to get on without her, Where before they had taken her work a matter of course and therefore placed little value on it they realized during the time “ gone how neces: well-being and w at a ditt made in everything when she on one It was like a new home, Each mem- ber of the family sought to alleviate her burdens, because they realised more than ever her REAL WORTH. Every mother OWES IT TO HER- SELF ‘as well as to her family to get away for a brief recreation whenever it is possible. Soe I Had Been King > Georgo Washington Lewis, was father of John Calvin Lewis, Te who might have been the twentieth ceacury monarch of an American em. re, John Calvin Lewis was born Aug. ‘ else.--LA BRUYE. obs r . No man can marry all the giris| ise Wa) 9 chter and § shes 3 "la hosiery the white 1s now pre- the people had permitted the settlag $088, Ia Lebanon, ‘Tenn, where good memory consists in being| DO, tell him they expect to die old | Me wearing Tait have, ut } have no clue — ferred by most women. Of course up of a monarchical form of govern-| phent his boyhood. A Southern to forget the things that you| ™#!d#—Toledo Bind ae ae there should be a few of those new ment, and tho Crown had been per-| RO'R and bred, his sympathies were itieeag wet remember—bacon News, ge, . | Whew. Mine Doollttie, concluded : li fancy slik stockings to wear with the petuuted In tho House of Washington, | pity, ‘he South when the Civil War ie meen ber | (Knowing, the business “from the Tern or WAS 00 ie Cost 1G An Icelanders in America. pumps, If tbe girl cannot mend her who would now be the King—or moré| vate in and he entistea as & pri- , exchange in answer to a corre-|$ou gotta know it, down “agaisee| ., “i sugwest that Promptress Pertie| ¢ GF Aceminee ORY tal eaten wits likely the Mraperom-of the United) took part in a numberof enmagae t says be will be “perfectly | Memphis Commercial-Appeal. | Order @ Found of gheere,” he said. HE first colony of Icelanders to) then thousands of Icelanders—per-| are found in every college, let hor SS) washington had no children, | Hoh including Appomattox, and ; ting married on Saturday, ee y , veten Bee 8 Vela, whieb establish» themselves on the| aps inspired by the old Icelandic send them home to mother each week. 1. Ie Srohable that the crown would| (em Went to Louisville, where he | oF any other day.” It seems to us thai| “Don't eat meat in summer,” ad. Syme? OehucKie ut tis Own wits American continent arrived at) asus of Eirlo the Red, whose gon Lait! In shoes there should be & palr of sour have ‘passed to the Lewis family, aa] Reentegome yours & railway toket { ‘4 » si bi 2 Po + .. | is sa ve voyaged to c ; 9 iF * omin toe j Baper i senumning » lot of reapon-|y 308 a health authority, At prevall: What indy auld that? oho aaktd | Lake iosseau AUR. 20, 1872, and| tive" centurion befote. Colimba= pamper ine purse limitations must ettie, Washington, sister, of, hel merchant, ne & well-tondo - 8 8 : advice.—Deseret New. | "t did,” replied Mrs. Skeeter| there began the pioneer adian| lave emigrated to America, most of| decide the quantity. Of course there |Father of His Country. married Col} The project for establishing @ new 2 #2 (O'Brien, “because IT believe that a] settlenient of their people. ‘This was) them settling in Western Canada and) must be evening slippers, boudoir Fielding Lewis, and by @ Union| kingdom in America, with the coy Me who “butts in” is always in| A woman will devote three hours | (ti¢ humor ase and thero will put) the besinning of a considerable im-| the Northwestern Btates. They have slippers and a pair of “mules” to go established @ family which to-day mander of the revolutionary army on of being made the goat.—Des- hing and fooling around eure the Mayor In the chair. inigration of Leelanders to America,! made sturdy, intelligent, patriotic, with the bathrobe claims the closest relationship to the) the throne, was launched soon ‘after lows. eae tar thas aoe hea we rub. Very good,” said Miss Poolittie,| The first party consisted of more| citizens, Vihijalmar Btefansson, the, A veil and scarf should be tucked first President jthe War was over, and a number of f Y ) Move ee Hy usband “though | fear you are paraphrasing | (han 150 men, women and children,| distinguished explorer, comes of Ice-| into the trunk, and for the winter | The genealogy of the Lewis tribe! army officers were involved tn the believe all that they ee Ns { me when Shakespeare {but only about a donen families set- | landic stock, his parents having emi-| days a woollen cap. Do not forget a shows that Col, Welding Lewis,| movement. Washington was indi G 1 poere Ob tes Gey panee &' ‘4 main | cleaning — The ladies applauded with great) ‘led in the Canadian colony, ‘The! grated from Iceland and settled in| few wash cloths and good bath tow. brothe: in-law of Washington, had ajnant when informed of this eche: ine ic fore: jonest pipe.—Philadelpbia Ct ee eee | vesnuluder scattered over Canada and Manitoba a year or two before Viti- | els. Gloves, hats and neck acces- son, also named Fielding; that the and promptly put his foot down \* few weat on io Wisconsin, Since| Jalmar was born in 1878, | serlee ‘cap be regulated by the purge, latter bad a son Charles, whose son, it

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