The evening world. Newspaper, September 7, 1916, Page 14

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The Ev > BT J08FrH PULITEEN ty ening W Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland — it te hee Pees Ge Oe Bee tet Gee Gomes 1 DACOH TER sorrows may strengthen (he heart ont lemme & wot tor bet BOREDOM ehe can tear iT lo) a2 @ #lllew plume after 6 we Ger, ae 6 maret Gere ae nine wo we © love efter @ jesious guerre ené bie Geveties otro" 8 eek Fepreahets him and epeakew ber mind tone ee bie tetqult Ae welcome as @ fortieth birth whens ween, Mee © a 7, #0 le © caval caller om the eventing peel ehpecteth ber Pet Men VOILA ME br —————- NO, 20,106 pone As comforting a2 & madeover frock which beeometh thee, eo te an ald THE POTENT PUBLIC! flame eho reappeareth after many years and et!!! edor the he comet) at (he peyobological moment, when thew art jonely end ous of EING commonly encoureged to believe ite interests paramount, tune — : , 4 As soothing a8 & UUM whee on & het Gey, #0 te & orien! man whe ite will predominant and ite power euj e, maybe Ve & good eorketh to KOMODIL thee according te « ern end remarketh hy bow thing for the public now « en to seo what @ negligible and thy complexion only to @inseot them quantity it re is As weloome ae & IUDAL surpriee on Clrintmas Day, so tee meeting with SUNINIETEE cid od sidarseen, comsientons ond Whole fms thy divorced bu afior (he obmeg when (he attentions of OTHER the illusion men have begun to bore thee As the weather on movin, corps of public offirins ¢ that it is directing ite affairs, adve for the publi a4 the cook bh f ite interests and protecting 7 cook In & cheap restaurant, ao A TT A straw bat in @ fall wind, eo ts the love of @ philanderor full of uscertainty ite rights. It even imagines the wa hinery that serves ite busin and shocks and constant surprises. 1 charge thee dally not with tt, for it te nd convenience is run for ite benefit and under ite control, Every loss eatiotying than delicatessen cream puff whereof the “filling” beth Bow and then it demands ci upervision, But on the whole it) been omitted feels eure the various utilities hanisme upon which it depends As @ marble bust on « tipply pedewta’, as & toupe that alippeth, as @ end for the support of which it pours out its nickels and dollars in} fat person in @ narrow passage, #o is » wan that te easily offended, He Bever ending streams are in its service, answerable to it for the proper performance of their functions Then a cog slips and what happe s? The public euddenly finds racketh thy nerves and giveth thee bh As a dinner without | dawn, as red hair upon # woman of | formation, fe a man that seeketh to he loveth thee the hore @’ sterton, vres fifty Kies thee * & dumbwatter whistle at a» convincing as @ cheap trans wi it firet declaring that that some important part of the machinery is out of adjustment, The For a little LIE would save him, yet he bath not the wit nor th thing it thought was service proves to be not service at all, but some | snort cau ( © wit nor the del thing erratic, obstinate, disruptive, recognizing no responsibilities and As an unbecoming negitgce, as a sotled boutolr cap, as a cold breaks over which it, the public, has no control whatever fant 3 3 Winter morning, 60 is a Woman that continueth to love « map 4 A after he hath ceased loving her ie aad = may walk, or starve, or sit in the dark, as the cane] | Abe Chit 1h the FYOd, ne’ brides acne Wilh:an ninatons, axe colt Dall y be. 0 car j1n the back of the neck, so 1s the man that gazeth about to admire OTHE! Theoretically the public is all powerful. Practically it is at the | women when he taketh thee forth to d s " merc; of its own utilities, able at any moment to be held up, trampled Verily, verily, naith the Cynic, sorrows may strengthen the heart and on, crippled, whenever wrengling emp! ‘s and workers choose to pts le 908 teF the oul—tet BORRDOM, whe enn bear it? ignore its needs. Theoretically the public can command anything. \— ae Benen eae ee Practically it can be browbeaten, threatened and kicked with . impunity. TI J ] . 1 | « We Public power, indeed! For three days past New York with its| 1¢e arr am 1] y 8,000,000 people has been a pitiable proof of public impotence, ' By Roy L. McCardell —-+-—————— H ce 1016, by The Hree Mubilsing Co, (The New York Rvening Word) UNDERSEA MERCHANTMEN. GOP ON'T you think you could are you for every time I call you up. | range to come downtown this) You must hava some QUEER people HE United States Government is not likely to budge from its | afternoon and look over our| telephoning you firm and sensible stand regarding the status of submersible Lilt ata he Ble apna esta nick Mr. Jarr begwared this r : remark all “They're the finest and most up-to-| but again asked Mra, Jarr to come vessels. | date offices in the city, There isn't downtown and seo the new quarters, | It has not accepted the British view that all submarines are war- ships because “indistinguishable” from the fighting variety, nor does it agree that neutral ports must exclude unarmed submarines on the score that they are potential war vessels, A formal memorandum handed to the British Ambassador at Washington is believed to reaffirm this Government's view that each submarine is to be judged by its individual character and equipment } like any surface croft. 4 When the Deutschland arrived in American waters it was thor- oughly inspected by the United States authorities. The gallant little vessel stood all tests and established its claim to be classed as an unarmed merchant vessel. If Germany sends more of the same kind Acserican harbors will be-open to them, however Spain or Norway may decide to treat them. ' A freight boat is a freight boat whether it travels over or under the waves, and Great Britain can hardly expect the United States to another firm ia our ine with such! of which the firm was very proud fine offices." | So, in the afternoon, Mrs. Jarr took “Pity the firm didn’t atay in the! herself away from all the delights of old place and spend a little of the) early fall bargein sales in the shops money they've wasted on new offices! ping district and journeyed down to in giving the employees more| the wholesale quarter of the town money,” sniffed Mrs. Jarr, | Mr. Jarr received her with great Ine “Well, it's whispered around that | terest, and sse went around with everybody Is to get a raise the first of him renewing acquaintances with the next month,” said Mr. Jarr. “And I,| various heads of the departments. for one, am mighty glad of it,” be) she espectally nice to Jobnson, added heartily. . the cashier, and Jenkins, the book- “Huh! I don't see where {t's any » and told them that it was far special compliment to YOU 4f every-| better than a bigger salary, or even body else gets more money!" Fe-| 9 *h fine quarters, to know her hus marke@ Mrs. Jarr. | band was fn business association with “It isn't any special compliment to|the men THEY were, me, and I'm glad it's not,” replied) “Now look at these partitions,” said Mr, Jarr, Mr. Jarr, as he led her away to show. “That's be her the place. “Solid er the place. “Solid mahogany, who lets everybody get the best of| api @| @ Ellabelle Mae Doolittle By Bide Dudley The History of Umbrellas | Do You Have the Capacity for Love? By Sophie Irene Loeb. Copyright, 1916, by The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) OU jnat ought to love some-|have no near relatives. I love little children, I should have been a mother. rs vuse you are a big booby HE antiquity of our old and. Mrs. Jarr had caught sight of ai Coperight. 1018, by The Pras Publishing On. vn much-loved friend, the um- ‘i ; . Knt sight o} iti (The New York Evening World.) The mother instinct is in every a , | you. I don't ses why you should in-| the ographe ‘08 turn away legitimate commerce merely to save British nerves, LABEL Uke COOLITTLE: woman of aixty, a #0! weman, “It is something to mother brella, ts beyond dispute. TO! forest yourscit in other people. I'll] "What a bell thee anon wort, + -—___ the noted poetess of Delhi, has|*troked the cat in her lap. “I amJeven this poor old cat. It is @ live! Chinese, who are never #0 HAPPY 48) wager that man Johnsoa and that! xe eee ee * pas very, very lonely,” she sighed, with] thing. It follows you and looks tol when juggling with groups of cen- sand. that exclaimed? STILL FLIRTIN vented a cure for the tobacco} '' 1. rolling down her checks.!¥0U.for food and affection. I wish I fi 7 tng) man Jenkins didn't put themselves! “And if you'll notice the electrie G. habit, She calls it the Rhyme} had‘ adopted @ little child, but the| tures, date the appearance of the) out getting your salary satsed, 80 WhY| tight fixtures, they're solld bronze,” Cure. That it brings results there ia} 5% had Just lost her mother, who|ways of little ones are unknown to| first umbrella back to four or five| j ¥ 5 should you get them an increase asked Mrs, Jacr. “Why, I had nothing to do with it,” replied Mr, Jarr, “Of course, I'm glad they get an increase as well as OB one day this week the record of automobile accidents in and about New York was seven persons killed and sixteen injured, During last month arrests for traffic violations in the city averaged over fifty each day; 371 persons were arrested for had died of old age—ninety years. When I tried to tell her that the old lady was much better-off, as she had been a burden to herself and Mr. Jarr went on, And do you tell me that a girl who works for her iiving can afford to dress like that?” asked Mrs, Jarr, and it ts too late,” she deplored. “I wish you would write about It,” she urged me. “Tell your readers to cultivate @ capacity for love if they haven't one. Tell them to love some- thousand years before the Mosaic date of the creation of the world. Sanscrit poets carry many allusions to its value as a protector of the bar no doubt, since Miss Doolittle tried it! with great suceesa on her father, the} Hon, Peter P. Doolittle, and he woud | be @ hard subject for any kind of a reas -f 5 fas y “T said solid bronze,” said Mr. Jary, others for several years, “Ah,” ehe|body before timo has put the cold| headed. In the Chaldaic Scriptures of Py © A°¥) 01 Ai inl An ' . at cure, eh om mantle ft bi aml Sine aa ie 2 vat do, And that's all, me 9 myer pointing to t fixtures, speeding, 45 for reckless driving and 9 for driving while intoxicated. Miss Doollttle's discovery of the|*nswered, “but she was just Ike a) they itndtnelr capacity for love hes | Niucveh We are told that the um=-| wand don't you think it's about for love has child to mo in the time she was help- and I sorely miss the care of ) her hal is bronze, but ft isn’t _ replicd Mrs, Jarr, “Why does brella as an emblem of royalty adopt- Rhyme Cure came about almost by ed by Eastern nations was generally | accident, Her father was in the dwindled with the yea: There is wisdom in thi words, During the eight months of the present year ending Sept. 1 the number of persons kill.d by automobiles in New York rose to 226— time you stopped other people?” Mr doing favors for rr asked, and woman's There are thousand: carried over the King in time of peace | : ’ es | "i habit of smoking an ancient pipe in| her. She was the one human thing people in the world, They Stadia and sometimes even in war, | shook her head sadly, as all g od | — began Mr. Jarr, @ rate of 339 a year. Hs rb yt room and the poetess said/|I had to love that was close to me.’ j pected to just fall in love some day| 1 was with an umbrella borne over | “Yes will when th cannot make] «on, pother the desks!” exclaimed 4 f ied her. : sbands see that they aro sacrificin ow ‘ Despite all the police can do by watchfulncss and the prompt| “if thats the case,” hor father had| This woman has been a aelf-sup-) through fo emort on thelr part. | |asy read that Vishnu ia said to have | USvanis seo Wot they aro sacrific ©! Mrs, Jarr, “What are you trying to porting person all her life. She built up a prosperous business. “Yet, I should have married — married early,” she reasoned, “because I real- ize more than ever the capacity that I have for love, the capacity that ta in everybody if they will only let tt come tn, But the trouble of it all ts that they shut it out in early life— they are so busy with other things. “They think there will be aid time after time, "1 guess you'd better go out." Bo Miss Doolittle set her brain to as themselves for others, “But you haven't said y down and see the new oiflc the obtuse husbund, “Will you “Oh, I suppore I'l have to go to} “arrest of offenders, careless motor car driving in this State is con- stantly on the increase anJ victims multiply. working and soon evolved a plan to Yet we read that o Glen Cove (L.1.) Justice the other day dis-] make it hot for her father and that missed 8 young woman motorist brought before him on the charge| pid’ read them to him at Intervals, dread them to him at intervals, of speeding because she was “too pretty to be fined.” ihe affair reached a crisis srelns Isn’t it about time the law stopped flirting with the automobile? evening. Doolittle had started the pipe going when the poetess Je rked a ——_4-___. In a total expense of $20,760.14 the “booze bills” of Gov, shield her for? hield whom? asked Mr, Jarr, at said Mrs, Jarr, pointing as she spoke, hn,” replied Mr. Jarr, “that's the niece. She's just completing practical course in office experience so's to teach it in settlement work to poor girls, She's to be married to a wealthy importer and"-—— love half way, sometimes more than half. You can’t love unless you are willing to give in return, Nor can you sit calmly by when it comes your way, You must run out and welcome it— play your part in its progress. Those you call “sunny souls” are the ones wi 0 Bavo the Sreatoat capacity for jove, and you haven't got it, easily be citivated, € sia Love your friends more, love your neighbors’ children, Love’ the people made bis visit to the infernal regions, | while the use of the umbrella in Greece during the days of Pisistratus and by Kotme under, the Consulate ant Em- | ire is attested by such writers as) : if Pausanius, Aristophanes, Aristotle, | please you,” replied Mrs, Jarr. “But 1o44° Plutarch, Ovid, Martial and Juvenal.; I'm pot one of those kind of women) | The Roman emcreley Loe Of skin) who like to hang around where thelr and leather, and stretched on rods,| "0% vay work. I've got my own ~ b tin use, the| husbands wor eee eae it ever ‘Owner | affairs to attend to, But I do hope honor of bearing it over the owner being reserved to the favorite slave|that, with the other Improvements, 'd come roll of manuscript from her bosom and, skinning off a poem, looked squarely at her parent und’ read as| : time | you work with, ¥ find 1 or servant, you will get aa office telephone oper- Rul gee ee a aba ad oer 1 ey h . ou w . You ean fin x . 0 jet aa offic asked Mrs, Jaer, sharply," Finicnsas party to the Panama Exposition show up as only Sp OR og aM ge A when they have succeeded in other | Anout you if you but look for ie” v | The use of the parasol or sunshade, | 210. who'll know my voice and won't| tery wwostoand on Invelligent fooknne 17.14, things to find love—and remain happy| If you continue to love the hemana aad wo intelligent looking, ever after, Yet how wrong they are! | about you, the friend, the sister, tne fir. carried by the priestesses of | Athena at her festivals, began in Italy too ask me who I am and what I want In fairness we must reverse Prince Hal on Falstaff's id « yee ee sou f on't 1 v re go'by “ | brother, the associate 5 and France and England early in the | supper charges: pon iene ts Same Won’ be, | The years go by apd the Jnciipation| ins’ eds “ieepae nie wareer, When | seventeenth cemtury, being introduced | « “ ry Judge Doolittle (he was ian elec-/to acck love goes with it. One gets | ti he Bie thine eemek—linto these countries probubly from | T eae Lakes Steamsh But one half-pennyworth of sack to this intolerable tion judo in 1496) looked At his tals linto @ rut of living slone, and foal yours ee My eae tote ae In tte | China ‘by Jesuit miaslonarics. | The First Great Lakes Steams Lips. e jaughter and frowned, , and too} your capac! ve will be all t tie deal of bread! here do you get that stuff?” he|late they realize they have cut love| seater and you will be mon {S| ‘The story of the introduction of the| 4 ” ae you y t love more fitted to! umbrella into England as a protec- Seat fi King: Vouk ana " asked, Then he blew a cloud of|out of their lives, aad on nary Certo era in cer oneal ihe| HE first steamboats on the Great from Kingston to York and Nisgara, j ~ A ght at her. Miss Doolit-| snow 7 wove, after all, is ¢ ‘a J e aa were le da cent ‘apt. s McKenzie, who had had H its From S h arp Wi ts smoke straight at her, Miss Doolit ‘ow look at me. I live alone, x! the nner Aire ids elng able to find| ious interesting features of its his-| Lakes wer launched B COnUTY | ee om he etien cavee ane tle steeled, herself to her task and as ‘2 ‘0 forget the flaws, |iory, Jonus Hanway, famous as a ago, in 1816, on Lake Ontario. | © i, Whe Bren Acts of kindness lose much gf their) days was the joy and convenience of | ead her second rhyme. It follows: een eee = |philanthropist and founder of the | ‘tw th opsrated by steam were |Was in device en Take Ones value when they are done as if be-| making love by telephone.—-Toledo el is quite $ WARAANAAAAAARARAPORADARARORI | Seanmnnmnnnnnmannanonorarmnnnnan «| éMagiaicn Hospital, who in his earlier | soy rica ge that yeas on the Was in service on Lake Ontario for stowed from a superior level.—Albany| lade, : TI I iy . Ps @ | Magdalen Hospital, who in his earlier) constructed in that year on the shores | ten years, and soon had several rivals Journal. . ke 1e Legion of Honor H { Baki P le: rs had travelled into the far cor-| Oe Lake Ontario—the Ontario, built] for the lake trade. A fare of $15 was . eee Gowawiise maken ikea a fa : ae 13 ng Fowder | Bors Of the evr on an investigation | at Sackett’s Harbor, N. ¥., and the| charged trom Kingston to Niagara ‘BPatC kes all, | Po . de tions, had brough ic ” r >| " s owardice ne - . eens) | of trade condi tenac, Which was liunched at] for first class passengers, but. dec Pr tee latest way to eat srapotrult| at lenat {host of us—Memphia Com" | “judge Doolittle was startled, He HE famous French order known LYHOUGH paki With him a huge umbrella of the kind | Ere ttuwn, Canada, “The Frontenac | passengers were carried for $8.18 6 tosh and a rubber hat to t ble. F ial ° frowned deeply at his daugh but as the Legion of Honor was in- A sae ud Aes powder i commonly used by Persian poten-| v1. "one of the finest steamboats! head. e freight rate was“ You squirt the julc y-| Some of the doormat at pear {SHE Rever took her eyes off ‘hin. stituted by Na see sed over, ates. p . font at that pe She cost $75,000] shillings per barrel bulk." The first body else, but vou yourself aro welll the word “welcome really mean whae| Finally, he tied to appear at Cass | parte, when ho was First Consul, td Was originally a “Yankee no-| For some time had he kept secret | Ott ngth| steamboat on Lake Erle was the eecsten—Macen dows, ay) ro hat and, settling back in his chair, mut- | Parte: when he st Consul, "and {t is till used in much|the Possession of this prize, not dare) Or tock being 1 mntenac | Walk - in=the- Water, which was ; con New ui \tered: "AIL bunk!" ears ago. Although this order con- r quantities Ja the United States | 12 brave public opinion by ita use| a placed in o 1817, mak- | launched at Black Rock, near Buffalo, ‘The man who makes the but with most|_ !t didn’t even make the determined, | fers hongrs upon distinguished civil and Canada than in other pet private view being reserved for his | ing three .round trips each ‘month 818, contribution is usually the one who sity. —Deseret | Yet talented, poetéss hesitate. i®| servants of the State and eminent) pre invent | indy, aol — i kicks the most about the way the skinned off the third rhyme and read | a he Invention of modern commercial | one windy, FaINy day | AA nnmmmnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnAnnnnAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRAAAAAARAAA RNY church is run—Philadelphia Tele- os «© it. ‘This is he efactors of humanity, it is pro-| baking powder 1s usually attributed | 100, Hanway made & sortie ’ y ee) » ] graph. orld would be better oft at! M9, Vided What threeefifihe of all the} to rot, ben Norton Horstord, who | CSORGR, SAE SDS CULE { War, Once Foe, Now Friend of Beards j a aes BS WOuld Gulllvate Ao aeraen tam als awarded must © the off-| was born at Moscow, N, Y., nin ee : th vate a si | Rory NAV GSR DE the AsTs y-|elght years ago to-day, He became| his head, only to be neneennnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnng 3) tan, 2 good man has, mone, wrone than thelr “volces.m | (rou - the outbreak of U thous | a civil engineer and chemist and woe (Jeers and howls of the crowd. HILw present war threats) | the Romans commenced abaving in ~~ news. —: ae Maile 5 nny ' is of medals of the Legion have| wide fame in the latter science, In| Way found the umbrell, even ¢ ens to bring about a revival! oe Ath oontur + c., and Scipio ‘ ‘ papesere: J ‘Aree n Joolittle had eon awarded to soldiers and sailors} 1847 he Joined the Harvard faculty, otection from the showe f the vogue of the beard, it| Africanus ts said to have been the eee Another old acquaintance: “Don't | 4,” Se? b ati culty of the vogue of + it) first Roman to sub ¥ ‘ ' i ° on'tline third rhyme, turned to her|and puble servants, There are now|and served with distinction as Rum. | malodorous e " 3 - soman to submit te the daily ft ¥ Among the things an old man r al say told you but 1 really did hear" | jomer, who Was sitting in the cane| five classes, the Grand Cross being] ford professor of «plied science tor| and recent cats than against the rain,| Was an ancient war which cau a | ministrations of the barbe® ‘The Roe so eat he eilssed in the soo: SMACOR NOWS, rocking chair, and asked: “Mother,|the highest. Its recipients are num-| sixteen years, at which it had first been opened, the adoption of the general practice} man Emperors shaved until the time bd . > is Undertaker Stubbs very busy these | bered by hundreds, Whereas there are} He then retired to become the head| Early during their use in England] of shaving. Alexander the Great) of Hadrian, who permitted his beard Letters From the Peo ple days?" thousands of medals of the lower| of @ chemical concern in Providence, | umbrellas took the form of a large,| rgered. hia soldiers to lop off| ' OW to conceal a bad scar, ss “Not at all, my dear,” replied Mrs. | classes now being worn. ‘The badge|and made a number of important| unwieldy canopy which stood just | ere ee mititary purpose |G Ai of the ancient inhabitants of See Librarian N. Y@Public Library, Ye Doolittle. "We could get him on very | of the Legion of Honor is a five rayed| chemical discoveries 1n addition. to| inside the door of mansions and were , thelr beards et S€) Central and Western Europe went the Editor of The Evening World To the Euitor of ‘The F short notice and he's @ lovely man." | white enamelled star, bearing on the] popularizing baking powder, That | carried by footmen over the heads of | of depriving their enemies of tho op-|unshaven, although Jullus Caesar Is there any book that gives !nfor Does a young im Then came the real result in the|obverse side a fem: head and the|eulinary article has come into gen-| their masters, The umbrella of Han-| portunity to use the whiskers as @)says the Britons only allowed the - out diamonds, their value,from the British Ane Judge walked to an open| words publique Krancals and| eral use only in the last half century, | way'’s day undergone a wide handle in a tug of wa he n} mustache to grow, and cut off thi mation about o . tre eo 4 and perfection and imperfection? of 1898 require citize | window d threw his pipe clear|on the reverse side two crossed Nags| but within a few years of its intro-| transformation, the first marked de- thus inaugurated in ancient Greece} chin fo rly in English hi Where can | get it? vote? across the street, 1 the dy “Honneur et Patrie.”| duction in America it had almost | velopment being the spring trigger by continued until the reign of Justinian,| tory the clergy of England were . makani Ka. 484. Meat-11eth 64 Mecivdiien Cakicwnrvan “1 hope you're satisfled,”" he grunt | Many British and American citizens entirely superseded the primitive way | which it 1s opened or closed and tho when luxuriant whiskers again, be; | cunpelled to shive, i | Peblie Seboo -d ” mi Fem, ed, as he left the room. have received the medal of the|of making bread, biscuit, cakes, &c,,| substitution of silk fer gingham in came the thing, Abost of the . 1e golden age of the beard w, ia) We the Edits of The Evening World: To the Editar of The Kvening World ‘Pho others in the room looked at| Legion of Honor, and singe the war| by the use of yeast, sour milk and|the material, vhile the invention of | philosophers “set great store" by their] probably that of the reign of Hogs t q Where can I take ourse .n Spans What two words do "O, K." etand| each other and smiled, Ellabelle Mae|it has also been conferred upon the} soda, In cheap baking powders alum | the steel frame about forty-years ago beards, and Diogenes often asked | 1 » of France, when the man w tsb and typewriting, srenlags. sive of pad ne will San cyenibe of high| had won her fight. military leaders of all of the allies} {is used as a suberitute for cream of completes, ita olution into the | beardices ry if they repented of could ass grow whiskers was cone charge? school be postpons Li8 All were pleased, of France, tartar or tartar! ebapely ‘We use to-day, thelr man! lagraced, _~_ : = ~ Soom ee ‘“ gyre oe cnrine erent neneeinenigntnenae ener enna te to 5 amare —— —

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