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ae / ' ; a . ” The Evehing Wlori0. F ne +4 Pere Hee one ; : fm 7 ‘ i er he . . _- volume sy BONNY NO DODGING IT. yer must the poopie of thie ality endure the epee OW much i le { ther Meyer ead thew Publie Berrios Conus 0 ' 1 unions and tection offieiele to spare New vou How wick looper ere an orporation managers | hep (els Legere @t pubic eulborily oF fevor only with ewol lolor Millen! ood prevetious Wiuces we pulley may dinate! How much longer ere 6,000,000 people to be told that thetr rights ere ibieh, their Dusiness of no consequence end thelr convenience 0 Jobe! ‘The enewer reste with one man ‘The Mtate of New York otill has « Logislat The interests of prising half the population of the Htate ean till tion of ite representatives The welfare of the City of New York ie or ought to be etill of some concern to the Mate of) New York and to every offer of the Ntato Gove t | Ve all the tracties bhub the only power that hae wot shoated “1 ow WHE wot” Le the greatest power of all the publi, The one hope of | Petting oH cud to the coufilot te to lot that power epoak promptly and fe the potat, Vor wooke it has been but too plain that, despite all thetr efforts, peither the Mayor nor the Public Service Commission are in a position fo enforee Upon managers or men a eettiomont that shall give perma Bent protection to the public | ‘The only power that can come to the rescue and provide guaranties of lasting value te the lawmaking power of the people. 1 fe the tmporative duty of the Logtelature of the State of New York | fe ond now and forever @ oliuation which can thus outrage the rights of | thie city’s millions, Since the Legislature ie not in and can be convened in extraordinary on only by the Governor of the State, it becomes the plain aod imperative duty of Charles 8, Whitman to lesue the eummons. The Evening World wae the first to make the demand. again repeats: Call the Logtslature, Gov, Whitmas, You are the man answorable to Wow York (ity for further prolongation of tte present pitlable plight. Oe elain the prot It ‘Terrible, crawling, motor monsters are helping the Hritteh to hard wou yards of gain, Bowe yeare back Alexander the Great scared whole armies clean off the field by marching up 0 tow elephants O County Progressives: 1 believe that those who remain in the Progressive Party are sincere advocates of Progressive principles and that they are entirely capable of making up thelr own ailnde as to whom they should support I ask their support in the determined effort 1 mean to make to free this State of the waste and extravagance which the present Adimiutstration has lutroduced. On that plain, sensible platform, backed by his record, Judge Sea- Bary ought to appeal strongly to an increasing number of intelligent voters in this State who see no overwhelming reason why the national ambitions of any party should keep a first rate man out of the Exeou- tive chair at Albany. $e JUDGE SEABURY’S CLAIM. N THE oocasion of his first public appearance as a candidate Col. Roosevelt's notion, to be sure, is different. Justioe Seabury) 1 arrived at mother's before hunch ie Going all in his power to secure the re-election of Mr. Wilson and, deolares the Colonel, “it is out of the question for me to support any man who is supporting Mr, Wilson inthis campaign.” After all, there wes never anybody who could beat the Colonel at sponging out party limes or chalking in new ones down to selectmen and echool commit> tees to moet the exigencies of his personal situation, It more Democrats, Republicans and Progressives in New York Btate could be induced to take their eves off national politica and agree that their State Government has come to bo in large measure & grave business responsibility carried in the interest of millions of taxpayers, we should find more canditates of Judge Seabury's type peminated for State offices—and elected a oy When it's the high cost of everything everywhere what'll decome of everybody? Hits From Sharp Wits te nothing in the world that The Kalser thinks the success of Uke fallure-Los Angeles ‘Times eee the uew loan le evidence that Ger many will conquer, Him We have KuowO casas Where & new loam Bas deen negotiated just before # @raa weal into Dapbruptloy — Paleadelphas luquirer ‘What the average darky cook can't wadersiand is anybody being So par Voular just because 4 fy (yl! late the soup Columbia (HO) Shale, . oe “Checkers Game Hnds in Fignt” The man Who makes @ fool of Dim. No wonder, the desperate and x. sell is alWaye & sell wade wan —Dee. citemeat arousing contest thal it is! eret News Once we were present When a blot * 8 arose over a game of Wumbiely pews ware me, love wy @ Deseret Baltimore Sua, . " > Letters From the People Mteholas Ub, Karmond Pol Probably sept om De. ¥. Mackads, Victor Busmau Hy ihe Hui A Oe Wenig World WL, Chrintinn \., Comstautins, ‘Or Ie Of the date of sohool Juan b. & Pecuton ve A CONSTANT RBADER De the Wiitus & The Brcaing Word Boi. = the Deane Word know what the Board oe when |. ways Wat » will nol open defore ves it mean elomentary NY oF DOLD elementary and A CONSTANT. RRADAR, Russia, brace, mark, Greece aad Chia, Yeas Not Before. De the Maitor of The brening Word oe high sehools SLUDEN' Ome Come You. ae De the Reiter A The Brean Woes Melee Beinn ee ene ree i Will the postponement of the open nak 10 © GABA GARE SHO aah tae Of scnovim apply Lo DBM sebovin? OY d & & ¢ Finy Cone RE None Met Phe rain Won Fo the Weiter a Ths What io 4 0 Genk pine of L868 Ie Now York City larger in popa- | 2° os lation than Londen? Is Now York No. rey centre of (he world? Te ie Heiter ad Pine Mreuing Wenid: Fool KNgMd gets oo) ly a WicKel dated LAbY worth more © Otner COUMLPOS pay thay ile InLrmale value? Raw piseeut War vApouMwe? FN. Ly OLD TIMER, wpe for Governor, Judge Seabury said to a gathering of Kings | , The Evening World Daily Magssi ho Fail tmeomew ve bow quitting time so they won't send me on anotner celivery!” Just a Wife (Her Diary.) Edited by Janet ‘Trevor ERTS Ruth bvccins Wal CHAPTER LAVEEL TORE 24. Mother gave me my birthday party to-day, eluce to-morrow. my real birth. day—1 wovet take part in Mra Den. ford's affair. » 1 wanted to take Mary Duna with woe Tat shes @ curiously @enallive Litue person aud L huow ebe fell that my hor would rather Dave mo out siuere Oh thls special day. No aie ei We lo leave hor at Dome with a icok, and 1 consented, with the proviso that if she were lonesome she must join us at dinuer, Ned Promised to arrive 4s soon as bie afternoon Work Was over, Mother hugged me a» if she hadn't ween wo for @ year Aud Nell iny Little sister who Ras been away Visiting ail summer, kissed the Up ot ta nose iu her Own specially aud delightfully Mapertinant fashion, We bad au carly lunoh with (he things | like Best lo eat, and thea we sat down to sow wud talk. Mother | always hems ber own Bapkins, and Noll was belplug her with @ dosew Despits their protests | took & square of the thick, smooth linen and courted up comfortably tm the Little sowlng-chalr L used before my ware rhage. “Whea I was away this sumer,” | Nell remarked, @ maughty twinkle la her blue eyes “L met # Bice young doctor, who sald Ned used to be a | fearful sport whem he Was im medioal ; senool" Nel” mother exclaimed severely, “you shouldtu’t gosap abdout Mollie's busband “{ didn’t," Nell retorted, “t heard Philip Randall—that's the doctor talking about Ned with two or tnree| other wen. No one of them kuow | be was wy brother-in-law. Nothing wucd Was sald, auyWay, Phil asked one of the viners if he Kuew what Dad become of (hat old sport, Ned rousdtva.” “Thats all right, mother,” b said “Nell le Wrylug bo lease me, Dut ene wea't succeed.” Just thea Leonie, mother's mald, entered the room, “A. tell 9 abl fer Mra, Houghton,” whe sald. Ls Was Nod’ voice (nat spoke by whea |b picked up the revelver ‘Awtully gorey, Molla” be meld, “put L can't come to diuner tenn "Oh, Ned, its my bir rey, 1 alms wailed. Cau t you puss come? Vm « aw ty inet murrow LiKht just lo please you." “Dea't be childish,” was Ned's re ply. "You must have kuown, whea yeu marcied & doctor tdat vhere would De eugegemen's De gouldu't Koop, Mave & good Line apd don't worry, LU be home mgd but a way be laty, Qovddy.” And with uo other word of ox- planation oF excuse he rang off. Be fore 1 left the wiephone dovth - framed an adruit excuse fur other 4nd oumMpeoud my tHee LO a amliog aL o Bul | cvuldn't » he in winient thougnt "Lt be really ied, if be had might Dave vine! me Dad realy oarwdede uning w= | | Refl ections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland —es Ovwrright, I Wid by The Pree Publishing Ov. (The New York Breming World). Requiescat in Pace. KNOW that the swallows go south in the fall To escape from the chill and the snow; 1 know that ¢he lilles, eo slender and tall, Must fade—and the roses must die, one and all; And but, The The the hammock goes back to the old attic wall tell me, when eummer bas heard the “last call,” Ob, where do the Summer Girls go? branoh that ts troken must fall to its bed Midet the withered and dying below; vaso that is shattered 1s carelessly laid On the ashheap—Ddut, tell me, when summer has fled And Aad the last tender word of farewell has been sald, the vows that made are forgotten and dead, Ob, where do the broken Rearts go? If Achtites’ only vulnerable spot was in his heel, then his vanity must have gone to his feet, instead of to his bead. You cant expect a woman to accomplish much tn this life since she ls busy every minute of tt elther trying to get sume man, trying to get along with one or trying to get rid of ona ‘The average in the sea man marries only after be Das tried every other adventure for thrill and suddenly discovers that matrimony te the only real sovelty lett, Nothing annoys a man more than the attention of a girl who doesn’t {uterest him—univees tt ie the tmattention of one who does interest him Moot men save o lot of enerey dy yielding to © temptation fret and| moralising adou tt afterward. Let sleeping loves lia Dig not up dead @irtations in the false hope that they may be resuscitated by means of artificial respiration. Iu other words, {t's no use trytag to cook up an old love afulr after the dre ts out. Bucharest, the as it is by finest and waring world, as Mucharest w pal the people, clus advut $99,000 which puty |t im @ clase among Balkan Athens nas leas than 400,000 people, Sola about 100,000, and Belge b was devastaled Dy war, less (han 100,000, wolle Cectinje, the Montwnegrin vapital, We Dus & village by ltselt tore of 4,000 Lolita Until Roumania’y deciaion te enter brought Bucharest was the gayeat the war appere ’ be. scimmemnas Dabd nse war Originally aa ALY, the largest city, amd the, righest Cdwt & dainper va Lhe gay spirits of ‘Pocket Paris.’ UCHAREST, the capital city of) sought to Decome a Balkan Puris, and Reumania, offers With & fair measure of success, Many fing public and Dusingds Duildings apd private residences line the streets and uAurioug hotels, Whuwm charge $6 a duy for the smallest rooms, are aum- erOus, 4 are expensive restaurant cabarets, theatres and dance dally, I iy the metal plated cupolas of the in- numeradie churches, however, which sive to Bucharest its most picturesque aspect in the eyes of the visitur from the Weat, Bucharest the digweat | prize in the Balkans, m tbat part of the! The “Pocker Purts,” | 4s called Defore war ie * population at) capitals, de- | bad is it ditfoult of defense in time of war. serioua mALLUrS gumunenced rounds the eo raideradie tmirty years age, Large vundere of her de fortunes out of the populauon tng ey were liberal spenderm and Muogarian worknen, Dut mowt of Qualid, mmeauly DULE thesy let ty join the armies of the Ae all the capitals of (ne pear Central Empires Qefore Roumaoia | Bue, Bucbarest bas of late yeare| euiered tbe war, ee ee By J. H. Cassel sy. September 186. Stories of Stories Vite of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces By Albert Payson Terhune ee | | Muller | Ten years eer ie 1668 eure bad 4 « Bebles- yieteim tert back ¢ 4). And gow there tes hope of wigs joot law nH ellen there were bureaus where charitable toll yney or cloth p (he suffering soldions of people brow euch offering hey could end many thal (hey could wot spere—eod laid (hem upoo the alter of patriotiom To one of (hese relief bureaus, on & bitter cold December day, ame on Old Woman clad in rage She asked, in pure Me vere the place where the Schles iloletelo contributions were received, Cue of the clerks anewered that It war, The old & attered wallet and produced from it # handful of copp UUL of (his ehe counted ten marks and piled the money on the tabla ked a clerk, notebook ta with her siow countiog, ved thie process until her bagful of em: iowwenennen 8 the table in front of ber she had placed ten For the of money, each pile containt Fatheorieng. One hundred marke! ‘ poor to have cuntributed one use | The clerk, in curtosity, asked once more! | “From whom does thie money come?” And again she made anewer: “From me.” ¢ aurprine in his face, she went on, quickly: raid to accept tt, It is honest money, It will not hurt th | The clerk assured her he did not doubt h | merely been surprined at the generosity of the + “Et ia in memory of my only gon.” aaid the olf woman, very atmpt | “He wae my support, and he kept me omfort, Then came the war wit the Danes, 1, when Behleswig-Holatein wan threatened, and sent him to fight for the Fatherland, I have never been sorry I seat Bt though he died on the fleld of battle.” | he paused a moment, then continued | “Phe dreadful days followed; the days when the Germans betray: Achleawig-Holstein to the Danes, T knew God would not let our dear home land remain forever in the hands of foreigners, 1 knew that some day would make Schleswig-Holstein free and that my boy would no longer sleeg in ® Danish grave, but in the Jand his fathers had owned, That land woult one day be restored to us “For ten years I have watted,” ahe fints' aside 10 marks as aC honesty, but that he itt, ‘and every your T have pul riatimas present for my dead aon eee ; Here are the ten times 10 marke—his gift toward ¢he { igete, { rescue of his Fatherland from the Danes. I have starved to do this, but it was happy starvation,” s heiatealaiiaca hihi “Poor wouvin!” muttered one bystander, “T hopt she may not have thrown away her money upon a Cause that will fail” She caught the whispered words and answered in calm | “Have faith, Wickedness cannot forever triumph. Som be free, And this very day I shall begin saving another 10 marks fo. ¢ Uberty!" ’ | Fables of Everyday Folks By Sophie Irene Loeb | Coomright, 1016, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Frening World) | The Moon Coward. NCE upon a time there was @ Perhaps it would be « stunning bru: man who had many attrac- jnette who had learned to like him ver) tions, the main one being that|much indeed. The momentous tim! he was a very eligible party to take| would come again, when the moot some gitl for better or for worse. was in her most meilow mood—whet Ho was blessed with considerable | the girl's eyes danced with the mooq of this world’s goods which made him | beams. When her black bair hen 4 more eligible tn the eyes of many a/8* & raven’s wing and her merry longing lady. laughter made him thrill with The man knew this Besides he|desire to have her “for better % had seen considerable of life around | Worse.” him. He had seen many mistakes in| But he thought to himeelf, ft ls euty marriages, and hg was determined that |} ™oon madness, To-morrow the our he would not b® the fool to rush in] Will shine and ‘she will not look & where angels fear to tread—young|¢Mtrancing, Her darting eyes may bh fools that had rushed in and came|fu!! of temper, and scornful words out very wise old owls. may take the place of her langhten” ‘Therefore he determined to put @ oe ee rade 0 cures © - Uttle armor around himself, so that he atreid might be fool-proot, take the chance—the chance te Now this young man had a heart, /¢Very man takes, beginntag welt Dollars and Sense By H. J. Barrett. Mailing Campaigns. “ce O you know exactly what profit you make on cach item in your ling or stock?” in- quires a well known advertising man. 2S Adam bimeelf. “Have you ever employed @ disin- terested parson to thoroughly investi- gato the attitude of dealers and users to your product? Or, if you are a re- taller, of the people of your community | toward your store, your goods and your service? “De you know what vocational ad- | Vertising is and bow it buikie up! It was a big heart with full capacity for love-—the love of a wife and little children, thus his armor very often was of considerable wetght, and spoiled much pleasure for him, For example, when he found him- self with a pretty girt and a ehining moon he kept his armor tightly eealed, and {t was not easy, since as she eat Bo tt continued for e eumber & years. As long as this man was young and handsome and debemats the lovely creatures delighted to wall 4 in the moonlight with him But as the years went by ft wa different. Yes, they would ge 8 * luncheon with Bim, or to dina o to the theatre, But walks im t' moonlight? No, indeed, they wer on a “diet” and the doctor forted them remaining in the night ets. And now when he truly wanted en: of them and was glad to say ft, % wag dificult because he had ittle te e@e except @ ttle money, which i mat, bard to find these days. business? | beside him, the lovely areature who Do you get comprehensive reports! payed havoc with his heart, the from your salesmen, showing terrt- torial Josaibitiuve jase nas | mooadeams played bide and seek with “De you, personally, concern your- | her golden hair and endanced the love welt with your allvertising? ight 1m her eyes. man's call? arms and te she was the dearest “De you waste your own tims and | thing in the wortd and how he would money following Up worthless 10-| 1ove to sit in the moonlight with her Suiries oF do you compel Your dealare | vover and ever and ever. Where before they bad bean wat effect on the dealer, but that effect is| But he was afraid of “committing™| {ag to grow with him because be peat far from what the self-satisted ‘ad | nimsett He was afraid that if he| séssed all that love desired, sow the vegtisor imagines! oul follow his Ceelings in the moon- | shunned him because be bed shuaae 245 feet adove sea level, im the fertile Dut treeless plain of the snail, sluggish Dumbovttaa, | and its situation is such a9 to render Aa eladeraty system of tortitteatens, our- y. Bucharest had of German ied peabin: basa toes at she would Decome his for-| thelr little god—Cupid. He was afraid to take the} Father Tame had lai@ hold apes chance. Hie was afraid of the future, him. Now he longed for love but ¢ So he usually said the commonplace was not fortheoming—eil because t) the heyday of life he hed besm ¢ moon eoward, He became « hardened old bechata | and learned this moral: He whe tn youth fears the mean "Perhaps you sell direct, If you are @ manufacturer selling through salesmen, agencies or branch Douses| thing such as “I cam almost read @ direct to the consumer, you bave a woadertul opportunity for effective | direct-mail work, | “You can classify your usere by their vocations, work up mailing lists aad send out argument that is doudly newspaper in this bright light.” And the next time be wanted to walk in the moonlight with the lovely creature, she was “sorry dear boy, but she bad another engagement.” it of love must brave the dayiigh effective, decause it shows that be oo Mlready know something vf your pros | Aad still there would come others of lonely old ty pects individual necessities. “When your salesman comes he BELLI IIE OSE EEE finds the sround already ploughed and | ¢ . “4 , > seeded, an De bas to do ts tv Rare : a N \ h K 1 } pag Gel Facts Not Worth Knowing Sade that kaowledge of the product ( Das preceded Dig By Arthur Baer ‘ “It you also Yse general publicity, = the direct-mall work enables you to ‘ wee full value from thac puditcity ‘eoyraht, 14, by The Pree Publishing Co, (The Sew Yors Dresing World) Ty compieces ¢ atvertionn ; ment. It crystal! fleeting um- \y pression of the printed page; it males y tem perwuaal: it unesrtns [t te imposaidia to tras @ whale dy tte footprings. ader wdo would never Dave wiry.’ When giving away your Rusdand’s old uit to a daggar ahoays be ours + reeults of the war wag that your Nusdund ain't still inate of it, the stuppage ef the importa- tivn ef laberatery percelain, nd this Ras resulted in the manu- tucture of laboratory pervelain in ta country, whieh has stood the bydre- chlorte acid teats agually weil with nat manutuctured Oy the royal Ber. Un pottery in Germany, which uatit now hag Oven regarded ag the stand When your husband's corncod pipe ia worn out don't throw i¢ Sy Wish « listie ingenuity and @ pair of shears it cam de cut down to 19 Ge dudy. The dest time to plant soup ie im the epring Young sup choule ways de taken in tha winter. ard, says the Foguar Science Monthly. i ‘The cooking porcelain ware te deing By ailing the aquarium avery day it te poseidie to get 19.100 wieg produced in ivory, white, Drown mory mileage out of it. , betty aad olive grew, Dian and dec. é yrated, aad tor private ward work - a a, ee the pretty decoratens and delcuey 4 very seat rfact can Ya Nad Dy outting gloves on the af the ware make the percwiain Wghly aratue af Vemma | attractive, do Mule