The evening world. Newspaper, September 27, 1916, Page 14

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The Evenin : World Daily Megs z ine Wednesday, September 27 TF hee : awe bel ° e ey + By J. H. Cassel || Stories of Stories POTAPLICNED PY JOPROH Fo LrTeee ON nnn nnn a. ——o Renn ns nn nwewerores ow Vlots of Immortal Fiction Maate rpieces " , | By Albert Payson Terhune ; . | A | “THK PARROT DUEL, By Henri Murger, bs , LAA DOLANH® ear & musical comedy avire the rented @ WORLD Ss ! third foor ay 6 Quiet, semi-fasbionabie street ta Ports ame ,* The oveypied by Hurnbam, « ree ond ‘ VoLUM) COMMERCE, | Hornhe por ved aune TT quiet, Wet eee —_—_— » at hY day after Do into (he dreams of were HE DIFFERENCE rudely shattered. The actress bad a Cocu by name-—that ; T . the pet ber heart and the pest of (he whole etre OV WHITMAN is ‘ ‘ ' to let te Coco hung from front balcony of Dolore apartment, He iu s ‘ 1 nelle squatked and sang and talked aad screeched and swore be bad @ truly re r a ' . aeerer horrible vocabulary for twelve hours a day without ceasing a New . ; bin . ‘ Wuruhe mi it as tong we be could, Then he dreseed in bie mont - the rig ’ | gorgeous # aud called upon Dol Ae he 9 for the call 4 t 1 t oule be rebe 1 the complaint be planned to ma Ove oo with the errant é ' . The G ant. 1 ew be Englishmen siment and by the dlamouds he wore, ‘ ‘ z ed him tay to bined Boo bp time of ue | wit yr re sup ' one ‘ " * « Vib etay if even among ‘ It g as we sverag ue © Ub that ‘ t of ure herd-working t ° It ort ew “How dare you?” she cried ” fying to defeney of her beloved 4 eapitaliets and ta a fig ait ‘ |" “Put your owe prive on the b went on Burnba Vii bay him.” R tempt on f teveeta dave of the wd i iceitiacsa ua nee Ae B71 i have him in any ene's hande } who suffer from such cont if The Actress See | “He'd atay tr my bande Just long eoough tv wring ‘ h t threat th i t d Her Pet. hia miserable ft replied Hu ‘ m When the « threate . 1 calamity of a ne HB Ba dha Pit you will buy some ticketa for my beneat.” ef % Wide railros the Pres i} States Lelie thw red Dob Vil promine ed ‘ » came , oh th of 1 jin the tment flor where won't bet 1 ¢ e his high « ‘ aod de nites it hes : it public big dtenomina ‘ t hy Not so the Governor of New York. When half wy rece pei i ix tie the State is menaced with ser diruption of ite business and » len how a@roasty he 4 inaulted @ fraction of its rights le deems i inere expedient to turn lie ba f. ” Hs v6; hahing w i vows a a heli Gena * And thus bee . t More f u ever in the alr, And @ good many \ vesulto still iu the sume category Hurnhan, tty . te the vat rritant to ve ' set apa me ane his rooms, ee r Lice stopped t. Soh a baseedrum a it Again ' objected THREE YEARS FOR A WIFE-SLAYER. \ snawawnrd amy merry. And the dlatracted (rnin ced a new nove. He let-all the water faucets In his apartment. curr on and thea HREE MONTHS to three years for a man who pleads guilty w town for the Hefore dawn Dolor 1 nt wae ’ t and killing his wi in Jouddurat Was still pouring down from the ce Avain the si “ gabieloe is, Poe Uthortties came to her ald i . The Brooklyn Justice whe let off a wif yer with ¢ At last Burnham ¢ se lbes rors A is and f A he had « tena! I ght to play the plano tn his roow om 8 +530 Oh Bis Ste Chane * above sentence evidently holds that punishment of a crime hast ENE LO RY TE hired a pratesniOnal, pit £8100 n tees ny the f Value as an example or deterrent to others tempted to commit it. “T pppoe 38 Honus aw poeatbte pee ” ictor: nonth, Just the sea ¢¢ ‘thing clse—wit believe drink has ruined your life,” this Judge said to the wife-kill } Mei } fourteen hours dally, for thirty dare < “and IT am sending you to the penitentiary so that you may have ee by Keeping vl night ‘ } “ ) hy | ehbors began te move away, Then ® opportunity to break its grip upon you, | came the last and onfitet, Burnham, foil t every | ha Drunkenness accepted as a plea in extenuation of murder!! aes frites « buneh from his front win to the to: 5 Only the welfare of the murderer considered! cl rede | depended ouaak ebetinoones ‘s ee “What about the safety of ty? What about its right to pr , paraley is rank roles Adel beaan Wit was Dolores defeated she. Sh Another and eve! a tection ? If a man who gets drunk and kills his wife is to be treated | ngeier raevot Whereat Burnham up the wo groan ‘otlae as a sick soul entitled to a few months’ care and feeding at the public expense, how long before wife-slaughter will be regarded merely regrettable aberration occasionally following the abuse of liquor? of Three months to three years for killing a wife! | | Under this sort| ‘of dispensation Brooklyn seems likely to become a favorite spot for} a TARIFF anot® | SHiPAINe ave epalr and returned next day to Reflections of a Bachelor Girl ; By Helen Rowland England, @ Feperar RESE ay Murderers, . ° Be ovytiah', 1016. by The Pree Publahing Co. (The New York Evening Word : ye ietoeapen a | as : : ome PEP sacl The Man With the Singing Heart. If 4he barometer drops sharply to-morrow, don’t worry. 5 |e . 5 o | Serrrrrrrrrrsrerrss + U'D hardly call it poetry It will only be the cyclonic Republican candidat | An y isn't art! Ht: will entre tha ey date beginning | The Jarr_ ! Live es That Prove Democracy ae a Wite ARE sushi lest or @ New York State by storm, 4 i And he'll never reach the literary goal. ae | Family By Nixola Greeley-Smith (Her Diary. ) But the Joy with which he wrote it a : ae > Shows a “singing” in his heart | Seon COMBLES. ‘ 2 Covyright, WB, by The Preas Publishing Co, (The New York Erentug World), ‘eh a sh And a glimmer of Life's glory in his soul! y HERE a | By Roy L. McCardell No. I1.—Sappho. preserved by the fact that other later | “Edited by Janet Trevor = capture of the German strategic p« sition ombles, us) ope righ! The Press ul . re senna At . Copsright, 1916, by The Press hing Co, R ‘ rl P' jee e Ge Bic Pi n at Combles, thous 1 | Coveright. 1916, by The Prem Hubliguion Go. | 7 ONG before the tdea of democracy | Sappho was short and little and ithe Now Yeon Bresing Werte.) | It surely tsn't musteo— + the tiny village ia itself of no importance, nevertheless scores | : came into being, before the con-, dark, ‘Tradition says that she was | CHAPTER LXX1 > And you'd hardly call {t song; ‘ - r + : their return from thelr autos) tit ality and | mérrled and had @ daughter named ‘ ae 53: Pirepeeneate Ana hla: Gab ta aa ect 5 Bi a clean-cut achievement for the allies. Not only does it at mobile tour vacation Mrs. Jarr ception o i rty, equa 7 i Cleis, She founded @ school for girls CTOBER 29.—My eyes have just nd bis volee would cause a diva’s tear Ta noe be ally 4 z had insisted that they loiter as| fraternity had taken place even in the! and taught tt herself in an age when en on the last entry in this But the fact that he ean triil it, ‘ance them substantially toward the regaining of Peronne andl {they neared the outskirts of the city,, minds of philosophers, the world en-| Women were assumed to require no diary of mine, and I'm draw As he gayly trips alongs, Bapaume, but it sets up a mark of progress and thereby acts a8 4 so that their arrival at the portals of raged and enforced a bondage | Schooling © Was born at Mitylene, ‘ moral tonic for all the straining armies engaged in the terrific drive t "beyond the Somme, ' Worn and weary forces can ouly cheer themsel Si of whut their efforts have accomplished, In the grinding, resultless } «Warfare which has characterized the conflict on the western front any | | “genuine forge ahead is a godsend. ' parison of losses becomes maddening to men who fight to win. ++ Combles was little more than a railroad station, but it was a point of « Prime importance in the German line and the Germans did their) . desperate best to hold it. Well-defined successes like the taking oi ~ Combles will put more power behind the British thrust in northern France than a milion reinforcements, Arn the world suma up the situation in the west, it is bonnd to contrast the Somme with Verdun, ‘The great allied drive begun ton » weeks ago has already the force and speed of a genuine movement, intensity and at tremendous eost, got nowhere. The Germans pro- claimed their western battle line immoyva Yet here are the allies) « @howing that, if they choose, they can hammer it into loops. 4 Germany is not yet beaten, « with a forward step? But can it do much more fighting 2 Breadwinners lose, ————_. Letters From the People ‘To the Pilitor of The Byening World ‘To the Balter of What is tho value of an 1858 quar-| What day did November 2 1853 half dollar and 1858 half dol. on? " ¥ CW. PP warter, no rays or a To the PaAitor of The Rvening World half dollar, no arrows dag or rays on eagle, $25-$100; 1858 half dollar worth face value. Is there a premium on a plece dated 1814 R ADE. it : Five to Fifty Conte, on ; Fe the Editor of The Bveving World: + What is @ penny of 1857 worth? R 94 x. and one-half cent piece dated ‘ Noy He In a Citizen, RK. EB. To the Editor of The Evening World: Does a man born of foreign parents fm this country have to take out Maturalization papers before he van vote? F. W. B, Five to Fifty Cents | Fo the Editor of The Krening World What is the value of a penny flying American eagle series of 1857? A , | One Cents Thirty to Fitty Com | Fo the Editor of The Evening World ‘What is the value of an eagle cent 1858 and a allver three-cent dated 16667 DGN. No. Eveniug World of children under ve any benefits un- the Widow's Pension ill, as both father and mother are dead ‘DMOTHER, Three to Twenty-five cents, ‘To the Kalitor of The Exening World is he pat is the value of a cent dated ' To the .atitor of The Can grandmo' w One Cent, To the BAitor of The Evening World Let mo know the value of a large copper penny dated 1856. R. D. K, Friday, To the Eilitor of The Rrening World What day did Dec, 18, 1903, fail on? | ( with evidence | ‘To gauge progress only by de >The German attack upon Verdun, kept up for months with frightful! | thet home be effected after dark. {within bondage, and there was no “Why don't you want to get home, man so low or by daylight?” asked Mr, Jarr. “We) were not considered could make it easily.” humbler than he. “Because I know very weil that man| In our own day this aristocracy of Gus would make tt a caso of celebra-| sex has survived all others, and as Hon, this belag HIS car!" replied Mrs.) John Stuart Mill pointed out, feudal- ‘ism, which has disappeared from gov- mont, is still alive in family I t the name of Homer, an old blind should live to-day, when the kings of his era are forgotien, | attests the democracy cly than that the fame of Sappho, & woman born 660 years befgre Christ, should have surmounted the barriers of sex as well as of time The Greeks divided women into two clas: lower and He ought to make it a cclebration,” growled 3 “We all to! |make it a celebration, [never thought | | we'd get home with the old scow at ‘all We would not have, aither, only L have it tied from falling apart with | wire and rope.” “Why didn't you tell a |‘Flivver’ car in the frst pl never would have undertaken the itrip?” sald Mrs. Jarr, "1 suspected it) jwas a Filvver right from the first, and! for sinning. u nal o Henry confirmed my suspicion" The wives of the Greeks were n't talk,” ventured Mr. Ml porant and forbidden social con: lan “Why, Uncle Henry ts coltect- | utside their homes, In that cra wom- \ing to get a Flivver himself.” | en could spin and be respected or sin “He collected enough from you to; and be educated, It followed that |buy one,” said Mrs, Jarr, “It's the practically ail the great women jnat time I'l! visit relatives. It cost® the ancionts were sinners. | more than stopping at a Arst class re-) greatest of them all, who may have | wort.” | “Uncle Henry isn't collecting money to buy @ Fllvver,” Mr, Jarr explained, ovrnt it was a . and | igs by have given to the world, would never have been admitted to the presence “He ta collecting the parts, He of Queen Victoria, And it is propavle at she ¢ conside searches the roads where the auto- | ))\t DAS Would be ¢ nsiderably talked ) even if sue lived in New York City in 1916. But her pe 6 strong and beauuful that | mobiles pass and when he finds a |part that hag fallen from a Fliv * | rere e Then he finds colored the love lyrics writ all he carries it home. When he finds ion and women s ravath, And duplicate parts—parts he already has this in spite of that all her| |—he trades them with other collee- works were burned bi use Of their tore, He had parts enough to make licentlousnoss by order of tio Byxan pete, e@ Emperors about the year. 380 4 car out in the barn, all except &) 4p, The fragments of Appho which | | Ay wheel and one fender; 1 had hard work to keep him from taking those {parts off this car." | ‘Just the same, it was awful nico of Jncle Henry ‘hitching up his and following us to see we got | safely, He followed us ten pn have come dowa to us, it tuding her exquisite “Ode to . Aphrodite,” were horse away I rattling and coughing of the ‘say again, it was nice of b ein front of their dynicite long : ‘ dark, Mrs, Jarr, caune, until you got the wire and Qe" on the point of rope and tied this dreadful ear tos, out the tired and sle demanded that Lup the stairs of the apartment, gether, 1 was afraid it would go to u | pleces every minute.” and unlock the door hat was Uncle Henry again,” re- tecce elehh alsa tha marked Mr, Jarr gloomily, "think . Fare remonst rated fle got up in the night and took out would be a friendly aet, who some bolts so our ear woulg fall to ove pO paid ie Sarr, call pieces, and he would get the parts he | dione for a few minutes some fend lacked to assemble the car he has in human form will leave. another been collecting.” Ike ite and i have two of "Please don’t call it OUR cart | hm one ni jsnapped Mrs, Jarr, “It wouldn't be eth Sere: remarhed. Mr. dane jour car if we never get one." honds ne. You take the ‘They arvived quietly, except for the | children uy, as and Ll return it to amble that all women | of genius less | for spinning, the other | of; Sappho, | en Une most exquisite poet women | eS 's Nest to knowing when to seize an opportunity, the most bpartant | vy hen we asked him for his name thing in life ix to know when to forego an advantage—BEACONSFIELD | realize that you were not Informed . ing nightmare a long breath of relief that the has lifted, For at last 1 h the tsiand of Lesbos, and the name , of her husband is said ty have been Cereolas, A legend says that when | know that Ned is safe; I know where . : Whe F dhe nantad thecaueeroue ake appeal Ce hore teat heat te cutie Comradeship: The only safe ship in which to embark on the Sea of fell madly du love with Phaon, a! oa gotiperately leav at such | Matrimony, [handsome young boatman of Lesbos, al hte ! pidatied shld ait daca | paeoatn and when Phaon declined to requite | torturing anxiety. om ; |her affection she flung herself from! Yarly yesterday afternoon the ral Every man should hasten to embrace his opportunities; but that's no the Leueadian rock and perished. | ynone bell rang. When [ answered Teason why he should regard every pretty girl he meets as one of them nuch frequented by lovers because of | last few days—a man's volce asked | Love ts that deadiy state of autointoxication which makes a girl pre- a belief that those wyo leaped from. for Mre | it would die or be cured of unrequited | jlo It 1s not certain whether Sappho was killed or cured. His- | . Houghton. “Lam Mrs. Houghton,” [ replied. | “Then I have some news for you,” torians doubt that she ever made the | continued the strange voice. “Plense leap, and none of the fragments do not be unduly alarmed, but your which attest her genius mentions | nuehand is here at the Jerome Hos- [either the boatman Phaon or the Lew | 1) | endian cliff. } . 1 The Sapphic fragments are remark- Yh, fa he dead? T gasped. fer sitting at home and listening all evening for one man's ring on the telephone to going out and Mstening all evening to another nian’s protesta- tons of devotion. Don't marry a man ply because he declares that he ts willing to go to perdition for you; wal’ until you find one who is willing to stay away from the sort of things that lead to perdition for you. able their descriptions of the “No, indeed, madam,” tho voice a: brine ni * ies of love. t s to) sured me soothingly, ‘This ts Dr. A wovnan doesn't really dread “old age;" it’s that long etretch between R loved often and my and |-naipet, the physician who lag been thirty and fifty, when she cam no longer filrt gracefully and yet can't stop though she possessed the same con- ted | uttending him, and I can assure you that he ts not even dangerously in- ured, But he was knocked down in! he street three nights ago by a taxi ths cas ake cecantaaert of automobile, ‘The driver did not stop, Pa Arh Gere CHA the car, and your husband luy some Though my vetce die not till i. whole | time before bemg discovered by my world dle, | chauffeur, who was bringing me home Like all truly great women, Sappho, | one of the first to rise out of the | fre nw late call. | darkness and slavery in which women| “Dr. Houghton was unconactous, and wore submerged, truly loved her own | | T had him taken immediately to this sex and sought to improve ite cons | hospital, which {s near and which I jeltien. Tie mers ee Mas Goo) Visit regularly, He wore evening 1 ra before Christ would make hers) clothes and there was nothias to iden- \ one of the lives that prove democracy, tify him. I could only send a deserip- since by that action she lessened the tion to Police Headquarters. It was not until to-day that your husband, who iad been suffering from bondage within a bondage slavement of woinen to en cussion, pcovered complete | sciousne: | So as reformer as well as poet, she} leserved the eulogy written by Anti- | name, in sonR o'er WOMEN! And ho asked for me?” I cried, “Your name was the first to pass! pater; | his lips,” Dr. Talbot assured me. sciousness of greatness which flirting, that 1s #0 harrowing, | Shakespeare to write “Iam not for an age, but for all time,” love taught the lovely humility which tt rings to all women and she declared To die for love may be brave; but to marry for It Is the real test of heroism tn these skeptical days. 0 Re Facts Not Worth Knowing Ry Arthur Baer Copyright, 1016, by The Pree Dublishing Co. (The New York Evening World) LAW has been passed by the Zam-Zam courts prohibiting foreigners from taking building lots out of the country. It ts extremely dificult to cut bandages out of an old boiler. Most of the real estate in the Alps is extremely high, con cons | en the longest telegraph pole only has two ends, | {Sappho my i Var tar! ‘supreme as Homer men excelled, | | ; ki AN whales caught under sicty-fve feet in length must be thrown back into the ocean again, There is @ fine for fishermen who are caught with jand address he seemed suddenly to young whales in their baskets, jof his whereabouts, Despite his weak- When ordering eggs cooked on one side, be sure to inform the cook ness he wanted to go home at once. her way, and! Dut I told him you would come to WAich side you prefer. aired and the! him.” | on = Mr, Jarr “Give A new door invented by a Flatbush bungalow architect enabli ature | te dee Gu a to get his motor | him all my love and say I'll be there Consumer to pass either in or out, back, he strangely dissembled, Jas soon as I poasibly can.” | anWny don't you keep the cart” Then Dr, Talbot gave me the exact | asked, ey seve! joey Mave no place to keep it,” replied |ddrees of Jerome Hospital, Fever- ishly 1 called the boy at the switch- Mr. Jarr. “Purshermore, I wouldn't ‘board downstairs and bade him get ett qe a gift.” tmnt anything about ©) tast ft snatched my hat and @ tay hear, wher, with a few appropriate re- _" r had was “Instantly,” [ interrupted, Oars in 1917 rowboats will be neat but not gaudy, a a a he that fury about nothing I should nev- have been knocked down and heen forced to leave you alone all these brute for day: lot to formive, “Now don't worry any more about anything,” Molite, you have a ta “Who W et eding to| o8%& Lurged, “Just o ma keep that car, Ti | OME cout and soon was speeding tox ©) ‘ou couldn't help it” T assured] Bo Te held Wed'e, hand end ire y you pat to ward (he lespital, him tenderly, “And T have you now|ataved together, quietly, until extra.” | “Howey, whispered Ned —I have you now he waa asleep,’ I've been to him. Jarr feeltngly, | w cakiy T pent my head close to — “But you must have thought that/again to-day, and Dr, Taner says he you take beck your bone breaker, |hix bandaged one I'l never for- I went off purpose,” sighed my/may come home day @fter to-mer- and let us be triende as heretofore.” | give myself, 1: 1 hada't gone off in husband. “I'd been an ill. row, ’ — —

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