The evening world. Newspaper, October 23, 1916, Page 14

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ESTARLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. ‘imal PMhed Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company,” New. 62 to 4 63 Park Row, New York RALPH PULITZER, President, 62 Park Row, J. ANGUS SHAW, Tronasurer, 63 Park Row. JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr., Secretary, 69 ered at the Post-Office at New York a9 Second-Clal Wadscripion Rates to The Brening |For Fngiand and the Continent asd World for the United States All Countries tn the International and Caneda Postal Union « $2.50]One Year... es i it0/One Month. Matter. VOLUME 87. .c08sicecesocees sverveveeversveNOr SOAC8 | IRRESISTIBLE. RGANIZED LABOR and the distinguished President Emeritus of Harvard University not of one mind concerning all) Woodrow Wilson has done. How much more significant for! that very reason the fact that this great industrial and thie grest in-| tellectual force find themsrlves in absolute accord on the main propo- | sition that the President the nation needs for the next four yeare is the President it now has. The first official campaign utterance of the American Federation | of Labor takes the form of a circular letter which, after reviewing | the humanitarian and protective labor measures signed by President | Wilaon, after praising the President’s foreign policy, which “without | involving this nation in war has secured for us all of the protection | end all of the benefits that would have acerued from a successful | international war,” reminds wage-carncrs that they “cannot afford | to lose their rights and opportunities through negligence and in- action.” | “Moet,” It advises them, “discuss the great issues to be de cided on Election Day, and then go to the polis, cast your vote as your conaclence directs for labor, justice, freedom and humanity.” In a letter to the Philadeiplia Public Ledger Dr. Eliot of Har. | yard, while frankly admitting his disapproval of the Adamson Eight. | Hour Law, nevertheless emphatically and impressively reiterates his} belief ! First, that the Democratic Party has done such an extraor- dinary amount of good work during the present Administration that the period from 1912 to 1916 will be memorable im the history of the United States; and secondly, that the man chiefly responsible for this consummate service to the Amer + can people should be again made their chief servant. “Never at any time within the last fifty years"—such is the sol-| emn assurance of the labor leaders—*have workers had more at stake in any political campaign than in the one that is to be decided in the election of Nov. 7.” | Listen to Dr. Eliot: The real question before the country in the Prestdeatial | election, so far as the appalling industrial warfare {s concerned, quite transcends the prevailing discussion about the personal | qualities and opinions of the two candidates, It being certain | that this disastrous warfare is to be intensified during the next i four years, and that the Increasing power of organized labor will be used more and more ruthlessly to the grave injury of the great majority of the population, the main political question now before the people is: To which of the two great parties {x It safer to confide the conduct of the Government's action tn relation to the struggle” 7 To my thinking it {6 safer to trust the Democratic Party. | 'rn tired of For more than thirty years past the Democratic Party bas ae shown more sympathy with ordinary humanity, with the less | comfortable and happy classes, with (he dejected or discontented T h e J arr portion of the American population than the Republican Pagty i F am ily « has shown. ‘There is compelling argument in this identity of conclusions |“ arrived at by thinking forces so vastly different in immediate inter- By Roy L. McC ance! esta, environment, motives and mentality. On the one hand the Otte New Yor Powis Wor) quick, shrewd instinct of those whose primary concern is to get bigger | §¢ oO Shean ou en Wages and a more advantageous deal in a great era of industrial ac- Malarta,” said Mrs. Jenkins, celeration and expansion; on the other an extraordinary and deeply|¥%° had dropped in to pay @ call on matured intellect, recognized as one of the most robust, cultured and| !%% J&*? “Dut it has done me no good, disinterested forces in the nation’s intellectual life. The one in- stinctively intent upon its own immediate future; the other, with espectally these election Umes!” “Well, you can be glad you don't live in the city,” remarked Mrs. Ranglo, who was among those present; “the men make it an excuse to go out night after night, now that all these political meetings are going on.” “Now, you took the very words out of my mouth!" replied Mrs, Jenkins, “Do you think it's any better in the elty than in East Malaria? It's noth- far-sighted intelligence and patriotism, anxious only to discern noth-| ing ahead for the country but enduring prosperity, peace and honor, When two such essential, such different, yet at the same time tuch dynamic elements of the nation’s thought, after attacking from different points of view, the sume great question, arvive at the same conclusion, that conclusion appears /nore than ever irresistible: | In all that concerns both the country’s welfare at home and its posi jon among other nations the safest, surest guarantee the future of the United States cam have at this juneture from living voters is a| Democratic Administration with Woodrow Wilson for the next four | years at its head. body is a thief and @ grafter, and the weelly papers got out ealias every are delivered free to your », showing how much money was embezzled from the dog pound funds and how the custodian of the City | Hall bought and charged the clty with a a ent cuspldors at 14 cents each that could be bought at the 10-cent store A LETTER. right in our fair village, To the Editor of The Evening World “I don't mind the papers,” re- marked Mra, Jarr, “You don't have to read that atlly political stuff, But I do mind the way men in the city stay out at night during political cam- palgns and the way they drink when y stay out, You don't have to put up with that in the suburbs I read with pleasure your editorial on the action of the sixty-seven German-Americans of Knox County, Ohio. The condition existing in Knox County can be duplicated all over this country, including right here tn our own elty of | New York. I can furnish you the names of at least two hun- | dred German-American citizens of the Eleventh Assembly Dis | trict who heartily approve of and will vote for the re-election | Fvening | Men Who Fail © esti. beautiful out at Bust! ing but polltics out there, and every-| *, Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. By Helen Rowland. Coprraht, 1910, by The Pres Publisiiag (v, (Pe New York bien @ woman the first kiss is merely Love's prolog: more often Love's valedictory, It is not when a girl takes a soulful interest tn hi tastes and opinions that a man need tremble for freedom, but when she begins to take @ vital Interest in the way be parts his hair. If a man’s wife actually looked like the sort of woman he surreptitiously glances over her oulder to admire when they are dining out hg would probably order her to go straight home and “wash that stuff off her face.” “| | e—to a man it ts a World iT his A tew men pursue love as the; or an ideal; others plunge into it as they plunge Into the ocean of them merely “contract” {t as they would a disease. Many a woman who has looked forward to the Jay when she will be- come engaged as the great love-scene of her life 18 astonished after mar- riage to discover that she can't even remember how or when It happened eo pursie happiness but most “Shopping’—Five hours spent in looking at al! the things you want and car have.and five minutes spent {n buying something you do want and must have. Why ts {t # much harder to fall in love than {t used to be? Alas, be | cause love ts three-quarters imagination—-and problem-plays, sex-novels and the present feminine styles in clothes leave SO little to the Imagination! A man’s primary Interest, of course, {6 always in a woman's soul, but | until his secondary tntorest In her eyes or ber dimples makes him forget j all about her soul “Indeed we do, replied = Mra} a we} erennena of Woudrow Wilson. They are in hearty accord with bis able Jenkins. “Mr, Jenkins gues to thoue Men tn great place are thrice servants—servants of the sovereign or and courageous stand on the questions of foreign policy that political meettogy and then the po-| seqee, servants of fame und servants of business.—PRANCIS BACOS have come before him, They belleve that the professional litical leaders take him off to the a Germans who are working against him are tneptred sim: by saloons, You can always tell when | 7 oe ee ply by f a ofa Nttes came to re me, because the le 4 him up against the] discussion of pe anu & desire to advance their own polltic It's election Ume, becauae the lenders] them to stand Ballin) fSreunee. always see that every man with a] shutter on the porch window, for it) abrupt end. On behalf of these men and on behalf of the four German- American votes in my own family, three sons and myself, I write you heartily agreeing with your comment on the action | of the German-American residents of Knox County, Obto. WILLIAM H, W vote who has been drinking tou much is taken safely home.” “It's no wonder some womer |want to vote, I'm sure I d jpatd Mire, tangle don't no: “Of course,” she [rae — --——-- Aded, "I do want to vote simply bee 1 .* . rs y = ause the men don't want us to i H 1 t $ I rom Sh ar Pp Ww it Ss a vote; but If they wanted us to vote “EMciency” that costa more ! A train’ of thought ts easily! wouldn't.” it ts worth is the cause of much wrecked. = Memphis Commercial Ap-| "Certainly Beiency.—Philadel; as C A Pia uirer peal ‘Jerr. “But,” she continued, turning * 8 | “ None of the speed laws ever en-| Honuty is an bea belted fase ut yeu wumons ity Is a8 beauty does. But more us that they brought your husband acted, no matter how rigidly enforced, | poopie would curbed the a ple would love the aquash If it bad | home after the meetings. I hope you pet!" remarked Mrs. ivities of the Piast” man—diacon News. PIRHinn DAME Toledo: Binds, |told them what you thought of o 6 8 It In the opinion of some men that | the" Te seins that as high a» gasoline Opportunity, instead of knocking, “Was! would be the uve eatd fas been for some time that ail pi take y:-Medue'hammeris tha (Mem 2 The lant time thes OF auto owners whould te dry cleaned dow Blac seit 3 Jeune home fo was so by this time.—Milwaukee News | * 8 e mad at dim that when the loral polit- 8 6 ' The downward path le very easy ical leadere who brought him on the A thief never takes things like a who doesn't care where he porch rang the bell and asked mo mar —Deseret News Albany Journab Woes tbey should do with bim I wld 4 j ' was loose and had been banging) “How do you do? What do frightfully all night" think?” eried Mra, Hicke “Did they?" asked Mrs. Kangle you heard of Mrs, Stryv “Yes,” sald Mrs Jenkina, “but it! sister on Rivers! and the | hap: d to her little boy?’ | “Was he vun over by an aut wann'tany use) he slid down hutter banged worse than ever.” laria the reform element, Mr. votes this year ag they had the last election, so he doesn't think reform will) win, Anyway, the reform dog catcher was very impudent to me when he took | my Mttle boy's dog right out of our} she trusted him to Olga, her Swediv) nursery governess, entirely.” “Yes, you," erted the anxious “And now,” said Mrs. I frout yard tast summer, so hope they! preasively, “Olga has left and) } do lose.” | ver's sister fads the 1 At thiv juncture Mrs. Hickett was) thing but Swedish announced — ‘Tt y all rose ax one at eager way she entered that sho was Mrs. Stryver's to the bearer of important newa #0 the|the dieadful detaile by Chon vhe ed to y could se the somehow he can always manage to control his desire to propose to her} tik ly “Well, I'm glad the election will be | Did he fall out of an upstairs wtad jover soon, How will they vote in East) asked the assemble \ Malaria?” asked Mrs, Jarr “Oh, not so b but bad “LT only know that out tn Bast Ma-lenough!" cried Mrs. Mlckett, "V¥¢ Jonkina| know her mother ts @ prominent club. | says, hasn't as much money to buy) woman, and her time ts so taken up| |between soclety and her clubs that! World Daily Magazine _ By J. H. Cassel sooaauemmenanemmemnamecanmmaas looking for a job. I’m going to let the job lock for me. (Her Di CHAPTER 1 reer: | Edited by Janet Trevor. 1218, by The Fre by == = ———— Fifty Boys and Girls Famous in History By Albert Payson Terhune Comvright, 1910, by The Pree Publishing Oo. (The New York Brening World), | No. 4.—-ANDREW JACKSON, the Boy Warrtor. . N @ mud-thatche@ log cabin on the border between North and South Carolina lived a lanky, lean-faced lit@e boy—Anérew Jackson—with his widowed mother, Their home was in the midst of @ region whose sofl was red with the blood of slain men. For over this strip of ground some of the hottest fights of,the Revo- | lution were waged. And the lanky boy was brought face to face with all ‘war's horrors at an age when most lads are still in grammar school. ; Here he learned not only a murderous hatred for bis country’s e@p- | Pressore, but also the keen zest for warfare that later was to make Bim | one of America’s immortal soldiet | Before he was In his teens he bad tasted war. Ho had seen the Cage- | lina farmers strengthen their breastworks with cotton bales (a trick he | was one day to employ to splendid purpose in the battle of New Orleans). | He had seen redcoats devastate the peaceful land. He had seen his ragged | nelghbor go unarmed into battle in the hope of snatching up some fallen | comrade's musket and using {t against the foe. Ho had seen the murderous work of Engiand’s Indian allies, and had | planned the vengeance he was afterward to wreak on these ename savages, | When he was little more then ten he one day wielded a rifle in defend- ing @ log tort from a band of marauding Tories, He Sera} fred with deadly accuracy, and more than one man H Puntehmant; } in the attacking force fell beneath the barefoot child's wonderful aim, Soon aflerward he rede for his Mfe ~ from a equad of pursuing red-coat dragoons, When he was thirteen he and the patriot troop in which he had fought * voluntecr were captured. Andrew was assigned to do valet service for a h cavalry Captain, ¢ Captain flung a palr of muddy riding boots at the boy and bade him pan them, Andrew refused, point blank, proudly declaring that he was a Msoner of war and not a bootblack. The Captain, in fury at the stubborn ply, slashed at the youngster with his sabre , eae had no time to duck yhe blow, He threw up one arm to guard sis head The sword cle bit deop inte the th nd gashed the boy's sculp as well, Jeckson bore both scars ali his life, but his ready guard had saved fils skull from fracture. | A as he Was well enough to be on his sain he wae ordered to * of a patriot named mnmand, Instead, ho 1 fall sight of the hidden | Thompson, Andrew this time did r guided the British to a spot wher 1 disobey + they wer | fugitive, Thenghe arranged that they should waste so much time in getting to | the place of concealment that Thompson easily escaped before they could vad . to secire her boy's freedom in me infected with smallpox a wR loa Rofar was Wholly well again t w he Revolutionary War ended the six y 1 him } \s aned and penn il-edueat and w fe | There was nothing for o do in his own temo ind peril of the past six years he co , down 1 the plodding routin fr bouritey: alee ! Into an NEN ID Want oe PAN . | Carolinas ond beg afvesh in the \ de \r Such a life meant ceaseless toll and danger, to tore ind » uns | si ed to yo Tack He cu » th corsa, W the m « " Y ows founded th ity of Nushvilte there tnt vir f ‘ boy took up the study of law His real career had bewun, the career that was to moke vl for | moat statesman and General of his day, and which at list wa hi to the Presidency, Just a Wite Good Salesmanship | First of Three Articles Presenting Views of Experts. Salesmanship Means Selling Yourself, Says ©. Louis Allen. 2) Whet is the primary aded in a salesman? “as ary.) ix quality de-) thar wtony nan ont cod, Th Vb Ww ng ¢ causes XX VIL whenever as he believes 1 1 b take t ty explained, | then moves them ih 1 1 1 must for 4 smaller, }to act om that wr re Inexpensive riment and one belief.” Mupsées com Ing n day nursery Th result, an effect ar ty, you wouldn't leave the The qualifications of salesman such @ place!” Lo pro- ne, fold, He must know what bo and “fom: and Babitta g and why tt ds good for the must come and stay with unti loor open ts eae Mpeod sir ac hg ta lvok and na nan he appr i arrangement tbat suit by ( » few. Constant stu aut 1d love to have you and—above all fo monsiie™ imagination, enthustasm, optimism, Yos, but your tushond wouldn't | sp Clab and a man who are what make s ft jeare tor it" said Patty quiet ie a big executive job. Mr. A of tho a you Ininenvel {club has just been organized as the | charac ach day he regis- [local branch of the Wotid's Sales- | ter# ® mark for that day's eMetencs ihane to Hehe am one for any ideas evolved, one for | manehip Congres health, another for the day's optimiam Gis ame Sulexmanship really means three) And at tho end of the week he casts WARN nig AUR ee meee ht accord to Mr, Allen,!a personal balance, proving to himeel WAIN a queer Tittle sinile, "Hut he | 1 ‘winch are the goods; ‘man,'| Whether his efforts have been up tn " 1 Want me io come ulone, the standard. Whiel explains in 4 n ud he will not want y wh o hody and soul of the! way why he bollov, n atrayd t a ‘ence | WAY, Why he bolleves in this motte: und wee me, Men ayy ike that” | word, cand p, which te the sclence | syour yop, your w nothing | explained, “Zor whom ‘ There ig no such thing as a born larg the causer, Oe Tesulta, YOU |doue oxtea work tor a fortaight, He | 4), \. They are made in the white itdhaineeree has agsumed that Lam a widow, and |}, struggle, Bome individuals | three da he offered me a rom ale Co qualities which peculiarly |) wwnnnnnnnnnmnnmnnnae dy deer salary ino he t the en | vi f ivi ho never employed ane | it, cnem for the profession, Bub with } To-Day’s Anniv ersary { ne. ” out w ratane and ‘ . 2 other typist Who knew how to spell Nothin, tne ative are the| pew sree ye nna > MT toky nim td consider his offer, ie He LT + initiatl HIS 4s tho feast day of Bt Igna- for I realized that any Gay Dan +f What «into the past hae got to tua, a ninth century patriareh to arn about my work And) ome out in the future, What you| of Constantinople, and ia Ine Nake some such course as he hag | Coe ot nat reap. Work and you| land tho date hay all the signifeance t Thy ertale ¢ Jie win, We inust earn to under. | Of St. Ha »mew's Day tn France Lied stand, @ ton the other atde of | It Was just Youds ago, Oct 28, 1641 nerf AS NGIOINA i dienitied: [tt ante earnestly and sin. | {)4t lish Cathe started a rebel ‘a re ARE tana 0 TENS \coraly try to understand the other LWhich goo became anasqacre «@ Paya ey banda ora Pm fellow and his viewpoint, Make an| Asian and Scotch Protesmnte, Pateoh te wualied.laa’ ae honest effort to understand your] ,,Sulliclent provocation to rebellion her of Mt. Olney'a offer, [begin | ‘boss,’ your fellow workers, the Cum | Eni pata see gt doube a8 even FO OT aa V'nv going io | tomer, Learn to know those with| quence of repented repel emt t ve, The whom you are dealing and you wili| are rebellions and unt live, hurt thi ve them. an, more asctentitic © hall to consequent forfeitures, more than half @ million acres of land in the province of Ulster, and smaller tracts in other parts of the Emerald Isl: had been confiscated by the crown King James 1, after removing. the the n to find them responsive, Confl- dence begets confidence. “Do you eateh the viston? Do you see the opportunity for salesmen? ‘The last hundred years have bee ma- e bables yl) cure | 4 Patty took me y ‘ era, The future fust as surely! Irish from thelr na SA i be the man age. The industrial) nesses, divided ie id eanee ole owill y sof the recent past was due to} of hl English and Scottiah Protest duction; the next gront/ant subjects as chone to settle there +} will be taken t del man tal ohe number of Protestants slain ta © dt t 1 of distr idustrial| said to have been betwee: vor Fo promised. fT) purons of the past were for the most | 50,000 mn 40,000 ana supp ) would have pare makers of things; the business| ‘This also is the birthday of Robert tiled tt Wut few princes of the future will be mar-| Bridges, poet laureate of England. that she was ‘ what Xho koters, And marketers meana sales-| Horn 72 years ago, he began writing elt she must do, and there seemed | yh verse while a student at Eton and to he notliiig L could #ay: th those, "We need more actentific anleaman- | Oxford, Dee ntnteent BAYS engea ‘that |sop, ethleal standards by which the ber. -oameeed thelr future mbeht be safe and happy. Srl OF a ae ann certs Tua bed, nd DURABLE. at 5 « alock Patty returned, teed. BNE eee ee ta the here centre of the|. T8? &4miration which Bob felt for rhimphant. Sha had found ¢ fs industrial world. With our|Dis Aunt Margarot included all her Le Hay Y pronits portunitios in foreign elds, so re-| attributes, Ue eattiontestlae wour Nun tly opened up, our need is for] “E don't care much for platn teeth pen Nt cnind—she inserted, | Muster salesmen, men who can|iike mine, Aunt Margaret,” said Bob Tah ayveken the peoples of other lands to|one day, after a long silence, during bn walting, now, for Ned to come the meaning of Amertcan morchan-| which he had watched her in laughing ome, for 1 know he'll want to do @ conversation with his mother, ‘I wish something to help Patty and her ‘but the theory of manship is I had some copper-toed ones Uke [davies jomly the cold sclenc Armed with yours.”—Youth's Companies ~

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