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; *) Island taxpayers, Evening World Daily Magazine | Sone edit, sao. S ESTABLIGHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. PuMienee Dally Except ntes hid RALPH PULITZER, Presid: 43 Park Row. J. ANGUS BAW reasoner és Park Row. JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row. tered at th -Office at New York as Second-Class Matter, oumecaagusn fates So The Evening |For England and the Continent ‘World for the United States All Countries in the International Canad Postal Uniom osceesmrensrsmms $9.60/One Year... seen LOOT OLUME 57... .cceceeeeeeeeeeeeeteeereeeeee eNO, 20,166 “THE RANKS ARE FORMED.” HAT was a big torchlight parade the Republican powers mar- shalled for Mr. Hughes Saturday night. It must have cost 8 lot of money. When did Power and Privilege ever grudge money for lamps and oil to burn upon their altars? To-night will be quieter. Yet to-night far bigger forces are mar- ehalling. Millions of American citizens are getting ready to put ia action to-morrow the greatest power the nation recognizes—the na- tional will. J Two insistent questions make their final appeal to every voter: (1) Is the United States to continue to face a war-swept world with the steadfast, unchanged attitude and purpose which the Administration of Woodrow Wilson will insure? (2) Is the United States to tugn back from prosperity and progress and put itself at the mercy of influences that stand for inequality, injustice and reaction? As to the second of these two questions, President Wilson we'l defines wherein the Republican Party differs from the Democratic Party in what it holds before the American people: “The Republican Party offers them masters; we offer . them comrades and leaders. The Republican Party offers to take of them; we offer to go into the fight shoulder to shoulder with them to get the rights which no man has a right to give them.” As the President said Saturday: “The ranke are formed.” go man fall out or fail to do his duty there to-morrow. “Campaigns,” the old stagers say, “are not what they used to be.” VOTE YES. VERY voter in this State who believes in the preservation and extension of State parks secured to “the use of all the people” should vote Yes on Proposition No. 1, which he will find on ballot number three handed to him at the polls to-morrow. The $10,000,000 bond issue therein proposed is for the purpose of increasing the area of State parks and insuring the protection of State forests. Two million five hundred thousand dollars of the total is allotted to the purchase of more land for the Palisades Interstate Park, which has proved one of the most attractive and popular recreation grounds ever put within reach of the people of this city. Private subscribers have already promised another $2,500,000 for this project if Proposi- tion No. 1 is approved, making a total of $5,000,000 to complete the! Palisades Interstate Park and keep intact the beauties of a stretch of | river highlands as fine as any in the world. Seven million five hundred thousand dollars of the proposed bond issue is for the gradual acquisition of privately owned forest lands where such lands are needed to fill out State Forest Preserve tracts. in the Catskill and Adirondack Mountains in order to protect State timber areas from the effects of nearby denudation or from fire menace. A vote for the development of State Parks and Forests is d vote! for the safeguarding of water supplies, for the protection of fine| woodlands from the devastating, all-destroying policy of lumber cor- porations, for the extension of beautiful out-of-door playgrounds that offer health, strength and some of the best joys of living to mil lions—tfree. Vote Yes on Proposition No. 1. —__—_-+-____. Don’t forget, the public 1s going to need a rest too, eH THE RIGHT SORT. esos ISLAND wouldn’t be Staten Island if its political pa- triotism failed to come out strong on the loyally local sid The progress of Staten Island is, as usual, a paramount issue »» for Staten Island voters, The State Senatorial contest in Richmond finds Senator Crom- | well, the Republican incumbent, hard pressed by Candidate Edward P. Doyle, who secured the Progressive as well as the Democratic indorss-| ment. Both these gentlemen are known as rooters for Staten Island | 22%™ Under the Maht of a beautiful rights. But Mr. Doyle has the advantage in his services to Staten As Secretary of the Taxpayers’ Alliance of the Borough of Rich-| mond and as President of the New York Society for the Prevention| * of Municipal Waste, he has kept a sharp eye out for the interests of | his taxpaying fellow ‘Islanders. As an active real estate expert ho| has had much to do with the development of the Borough, was a| “~~ ‘6 strong influence in establishing the county road system, also in ex-! tending trolley lines and street lighting; he was secretary of the! committee that fixed the ferry at St. George, and he has been a} foreinost defender of Staten Island rights in the garbage rumpas, | Seven years as Supervisor and a term in the Assembly have him plenty of experience in tackling public business, Voters of Richmond and Rockland Counties have all the makings of a first rate Senator in Mr, Doyle. He is a fine type of the ardent, o energetic, loya) Staten Islander at his best. given! os See ee Settling Day Wednesday. ou = vane Letters From the People Tear Up Transterr, Will you please publish this lett - Po the Eaitor of THe Evening Work) With the request that unused atroet wf Fifty-two boys were arrested ijast|car transfers be torn up? o” at one point in New York City R. C, SHELDON, s making illegal use of transfers, |General Secretary Big Brother Move- fe can prevent these arrests, with “the consequent arraignment in ‘court, * and loss of time and perhaps emp “ment by the boys and their pares * Mf unused transfers are destroyed tall on? ** Undoubtedly many persons throw oe © oF give away these transfers. They Up to 25 Cents Ea cked up by boys and|To the Editor of The Brenmg World unwittingly and by| What is the valu of 1803 and 1807 in wilful violation of the law.! pennics? M. BP. ment, y, Sunday, vening World ys did Nov, 14, 1868, and J. M. Jan, 19, 18 by the Press Publishing Company,” Nos. 58 to lew York. errerrerry aan) They never were. | Men Who Fail | | and utterly Cope. 10 crs New York fveataa Wet By J. H. Cassel your present manager is inept incornpetent.” Fifty Boys and Girls Famous in History By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Drening World), No. 10—JOAN OF ARC: The Girl Who Freed France. RANCE was helpless under the sway of its English masters |, Like a resistiess wave, England's bowmen and steelolad knighte had surged over the stricken land, thrashing the French armisa, crushing all opposition, until France was little more than as English province, and Liberty wae a mere empty namo. The crazy old French King was dead. His son, the Dauphin (Crowm ,4 Prince), had not even troubled to have himself crowned in his fathers place; but hopeless of regaining his lost kingdom, spent bis time in disst- pation, while his.country was held tighter and tighter by the English. Then ove day as the Dauphin idled in his futile court at Chinon, he was told that the peasant folk of Domremy, in Lorraine, had become 4 slirred to fanatic excement by a shepherd girl of sixteen, who could neither read nor write, but who seemed inspired by Heaven. Churchmen and nobles of her own district had talked with the girl and, in spité of themselves, had become convinced that she was inspired, They had recalled too an ancient prophecy that France, in Its hour of direst need, would one day be rescued by a virgin from Domremy,® From the age of thirteen this peasant girl—-whom history knows ag Joan of Are—had heard voices whispering to her to save France. The same vo! had told whore to find a sacred sword, me? long buried, which she was ordained to wield in battle, i The eid | I | ter the voices became more specific, bidding hee Pulfilled. to seize from the English the City of Orleans—key te orn ali southern France—and then to crown the Dauphia at the Rhetms Cathedral, At first the lazy Dauphin laughed at there stories, Mediaeval Europe, * {was full of cranks and fanatics; and he naturally supposed sen ee one \ He; ot something Worse, But as one powerful noble and pi Shrghtanbther Gesougnt im to see her, be became mildly interested, last be bade her come to Chinon, By way of a joke—and to test her so-called “inspiration"—he dresee@ lone of his courtiers In the royal robes and set him upon the throne, The Dauphin himself, clad as a servant, stood in the crowd at an obscure corner | of the audience hall, Then he gave word for Joan to be admitted. ‘The girl—she was little more than a child—came into the great room, cast not a look at the gaudily clad figure on the throne; but walked straight across to the disguised Prince, fell on her knees before him ané eid: “You are Charles, Dauphin of France.” The Dauphin, awe-struck and convinced of her divine miasion, raise@ Joan to her feet. Willingly he 1 to her request that he give hee | ' d of an army to march ag Orleans, comman | Clad in full armor, and carrying her sacred sword and a consecrated banner, this illiterate shepherd rode at the head of 4,500 troops to the | Danner Orleans, She was absotut cnorant of warfare. Yet she wi , tet battle after ba ally wresting Orleans from the y for France's complete ¢ » to Rheims and assisted Afier which she declared and she begged leave pas 2 British, and A Monarch’s$ freedom, This ingratitude. at the Dauphin's c ° *’ her mission was accomplished | to go back to her father's farm. But the new crowned King would not hear of this. He bade hee continue the freeing of France, The poor child protested that Heaven had | {napired her to do no more than she had already done; and that hencefort che was like any other ignorant peasant, |" phe King insisted, And Joan obediently donned her armor once more , }and went forth to the task he assigned to her, But her faith in hereelg nspiration Was gone. in battle ed no mortal woman could have done what she had and in her in She was wounded They di on Sept. 8, 1429, and was captured by the English jlthat therefore she must have gold her soul to Satan, and they ‘tried her as & sorceress. | The neh King, whose realm she had saved, would not ratse a han@ cin her, She was tortured to make her confess she was a witch, Falling jolie J admit this He, the glish condemned her, on genera o induce her to vine jes, and burned her to death at the ike, Prine Paied the holy martyr-maid, purest patriot in all history. glorious work she had begun did not cease until France was free, But the ¢ Cook or Companion? By Coprright, 1016, by The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) HILE women are making wills giving $10,000 bonuses to granddaughters for being good cooks; while Annie Nathan Meyér ts advising girls to cook as a means the appeal of her, the hatr, how much she thinks of hi how faithful she is—in a word, t LOVE of her, I believe that tf every man who out wives, You can hire a cook, b of marriago, you can't pay wages to a wife an _ How ee none Peed ee ket all the name wife tmplles, Thero : re { 3 4 res jeme of matrimony? Does}is so thing more than belng a cook ] of] 7 - I +h a] G | that ts needed in the happy marriage | enections OT a bachelor Ir | moon, with his armas about the girl of] to-day that was not needed | t He thinks of the sweetness of her, anner of her, @ little trick of the eye, a little curl Unes cooks’ wages of the mouth, the way she wears her) Some women jove to cook; others In love with a woman were asked, “Would you marry her If she could Sophie Irene Loeb het hhh dh hhh hh hhhhhddie There are thousands of women who are paying cooks, und earning many to pay them with. Ovy it, 1016, The Prone Publiading Co. TM te “New Fork vecing World.) R, JARR was leaning back in his M chair and yawned and won- dered what good excuse he could give to break away from all the comfort at home for a few hours, when Mrs. Jarr sald You haven't given me that $5 1 won from you on & m,) hate it At the same time it is a he | noble work—cooking. In this age of domestic science cooking is an art. If | Yeu don't believes it go to the fine homes and big restaurants and learn ood cooks are being pald. ts to get married;/never cook?" he would take) his is the big principle that “4 while Commis-|chances Just the sume. And It he| makes for the happy murriage if it ia| Pet the other day?’ 1 H t{continued loving her he would’ bear | tot cooking? It ls what man himself You didn’t win $5 from me—no sioner Howe of | With bad biscuits, swallow the sour|demands of woman in the tweniteth | money was up," replied Mr. Jarr. Immigration 18] soup, master the tough meat and con- featury. She must be her husband's! “Just listen to that!" said bis wife. setting forth that| tinue indefinitely the inconveniences) best "good fellow.” She must be will- “You alwa: © back on your prom- servants are be-| of Indigestion, ,, | {Be tO permit his pleasures, #0 that beads dulled Rbuaditg Can anybody dispute it? Won't|he may approve of hers. ises and give some excuse for doing coming More] ne suffer anything if her ATTRAC-| The day is gone, in the vernacular, | tt." scarce, and that| TION for hin continues? when you can only “feed the brute" gave: you all the pehes ¢ hades {f we had women| No one ts going to discount the | and away with It PHOrO 18) very cent I had” replied Mr. Jarr, , of knowing how to cook, Every! olmething more demanded for hap yc "rep ; i Fords and Edl- ; should krow something about | Piness in the home, If any man were |"I haven't carfare, now that It's get- sons they would} th. culinary. art reater truth | choose between a good cook or a|ting toward the end of the week," hay away with kitchens alto was ever written than “You can iva Gil cuinpanion the anawer Ia, ob- eIEAOREPNOUTWAVe nb tk taSuay | Rother—Jjust what does a man himself euleea pee re eee “live. withoat |BUL the present day wife must be a}! needed to run the house," said Mrs. expect of a girl when he marries her cooks.” | helpmate and playmate too, Jarr, “The $5 I won I intended for is a matter of moment tn this melange But civilized men cannot Ive with- ut nd By Helen Rowland his heart, follow up his words of CAR eae Yep Pater ape aye eeeeeneees “WIL you be mine?” with “Can you| part of everything now | Copyright, 1916, bf The [res Wublishing Co, (The Now York Evening World) cook?” Now, docs he? Has any one], Why? Because man wants a COM- |, better to have kissed and paid the cost than never to have kissed ever heard of 1? A hundred yeara| PANION. | He wants a woman whe | ak at. ago, maybe. take her place elsewhere, wide by — But what does he think about It? Dollars and Sense. By H. J. Barrett. anaes So titannna nanny Vocational Cireularizing, | on matied t y # manufacture’ side with him and with his friends SAA RAARARUAAAAAAAADAAAA EARS OAS OADASTESER SAAS & At twenty It takes beauty to win a man’s love; at thirty it tukes skill or charm, and at forty it takes hypnotism, A kiss, says the Bachelor, is ke a rarebit or a Swiss cheese sandwich; something which one often en- Joys at night-—and always regrets in the morning, yi NG reason Why 9 eulsmnG | aftes appliance, Tie iM « ; Some men work for the love of work, some tor love will close more prospects in| cerns, and so jutelligently, definitely | - of art, some for love of humanity and some Just for @ given number of calls} 2n¢ Avineingly Were the luunber| Syeoeesmrse love of & woman: the only one with whom the world than a sales lotter 19 because he has | juraiy Mave qovered tas 1 C4" coula dispense quite comfortably 18 the man who works for love of himself |; 4n opportunity to size up his man and! fail to be impressed, The fustimonials | alone, | adapt bis arguments to the Individuai| Were all from fellow lumovrmen; the case,” said an advertising man. “Suppose, for example, one were to market an edition of the tapylonian Talmud trough mailing cunpagus covering lists, Many men would cons tent themselves with preparing de: Jacriptive matter, sample pages a | series of follow-up letters, but the Talmud contains a Vast amount of Titerial whic tei of mpsoies interest | allotting a salesman to prospects to various professions, Clergymen|of Whom are engaged in the sa find it interesting because of its the-| line of business rather than givi ology; lawyers, because of its tegal| him a certain physical territory, ‘1 pilance would be of value despite the fact that the aah equally valuable to a bond bouse, “Advertising planned as ecarctu tas this cannot fail to pull, J cational idea has, of course, b piled successfully to sales forces, 1. lore; doctors, because of its data re-| 1% thoroughly practical In great clues lang to health and hygiene, Plain-| and, In many instances, means in- y, the vefore, much better Feaulse | cre turns, because the salea- A kiss may be anything from a benediction to an inavit, yet men never would accrue from pre paring separate i werk Penile with the prop- | will understand why @ girl seems flattered when one of them tries to kiss literature and letters for these vari-| lems faced by their prospects and . ous professions—featuring in each! can discuss them inteligently, her and indignant when another attempts it, case the matter which applied di-| "Vocational matling campaigns, rectly to it. however, are relatively a nove'lty. The greatest friend of love {s a good dinner; the greatest enemy a bat “Only the othe: day I received al That they mean more results for | s # F a @pecimen of the vocational advertis- cost ig obvious.” . concrete Instances in which the ap- all It isn’t love that causes so much of the trouble in this world; tt 1s all | of its lites imitations, variations and combinations. ily Mother used to hold her fan before her face in order to hide her blushes; nowadays Daughter holds hers there merely in order to accentuate ber | “blushes” with @ little more rouge, all | me Some men are born artistic Mars; some acquire the art of lying; but his | most of them merely get married and have {t gradually thrust upon thea nen, | digestion. The Jarr Family (@ think t's gambling. WAVOVATETEESOVOOO AOMEAAAOAES VVAAAADADAAAARRSAAAAAS A TANEAAAAAAS, By Roy L. McCardell PVUREVUSEOEES ETRE HUTHOO myself. Oh, never mind, - © were only supposing,” sald Mr, pect it anyway." | Jarr, “and tf we were not, If you lost ? “What's. the use to bet with a/and I gave you the money to pay me woman?” remarked Mr. Jarr. "Tho|I'd have the ‘money back again, woman never lived who pald a bet.| wouldn't 1?" If she wins she expects the stakes| “I don't understand {t a bit,” ree and dune till she gets them; but !f/ plied Mrs. Jarr, “And {t's no use + lahe loses it Is a case of forgetting All| trying to explain to me when It's all F, Jabout tt. Or, if she's asked, she | 80 confusing.” says, ‘Oh, that was only a joke.’ 1 didn't 4 | “Well, here, no’ sald Mr. Jarre “1 guppose you think it was only| We have made a wager of five dole a joke when you offered to bet me|lars. I have won ft. You haven’® $5," said Mrs, Jarr. “In fact, you in-|the money to pay me. 1 give it te sisted on It and I didn’t want to bet. you.” Here Mr. Jarr handed her @ In fact, I didn’t | five-dollar bill to illustrate “Now even answer you, although I knew I/ give tt back to me.” was right, and you sald over and over; “We were only supposing this time. again, ‘I'll bet you $5 I'm right!" And/1 didn't really bet, did 1?” asked Mra, you were not.” # |Jarr, as she held the money. ou admit yourself you didn't bet | , this is only to illustrat sald Mr, Jarr. arr, "7 " sald 4 wasn't @ real bet. Mr “Oh, Mr, Jarr!" sald the good Indy. | but ne bet we made the “I never thought you could be as other day w and I won, and so ly mean as all that! Even if 1 didn’t bet | keep this money replied Mra. Jarr in the exact meaning of the word, yet| “Hold on! ‘That's not falrl” exe you lost, and you should pay me.” | claimed Mr. Jarr. “You give me back “Would you have paid me if you that money! If you don't I'll go had been wrong?" asked Mr. Jarr, “Certainly 1 would," replied Mra, Jarr; “but you knew when you of-|all hours." fered to bot me that I had no money,| “If you prefer card playing come and even if I had lost you wouldn’t/ pany to the soclety of your home, have given me the money to pay you." | you may go," sald Mrs |right out and play pinochle at the |corner and I won't come back til) Jarr, ae. “Oh. yes, 1 would have,” sald Mr.| verely; “but this is mine and I'ta gos Jarr. Ing to keep it," a “L can't see why you always want|,,A%, Mi Jarr burried out of the Use he su | led to el C) to gamble, You should be ashamed of | cheap at the wee ee price, and I intended yourself,” replied Mrs, Jarr. “If every | &iving it to ber, anyway,” he said. ttle thing ts to be made the sunject | Rye dare said, “I wonder if he |of @ Wager the less we argue over | ir docu do ty eye”, Ot well, | matters the better,” | ‘ 2 Wy to keep them } ‘home too much,” es Maryland. : NRAGED by tne sight of Federay troops marching through their city to tight Southern forces, , + jellzens of Balumore tired upon a” | Massachusetts regiment in Apri tee Wild mes ensued, and when’ dees [pews reached Jamen Kyder Randal, atessor of Engiiah at . ated their slaves ‘and rem: Nege in Louisiana, he took ian ote Philadelpula, joining the autt-slavery (Oat Maryland, bis native State, bh a socteties and becoming affiliated with |Cast the die and would join the'Cam the Quakers, |federacy, il The Griinitos were descended trom |! sat down tn a forvor of inapi a French Huguenot family, Thomas, | and wrote one of the songe mee brother of Sarah Grimke, became a) N49 to help the South throu, distinguished lawyer in Charloaton, Ditter trials, Tt t9 a lyrical but was more widely known on ao- |@FMs, of which the finest vers count of hits addresses upon peace |4bly 18 tho following: and religion, Ho heid that oven de-| Thou wilt not yleld the vandal eou, fonsive warfare ts wicked, and whon “iis melo +3 Famous Songs | Qawnennnnnnnnnnane 1$ To-Day’s Anniversary ee PAS MONG the frst Americans to| iA advocate “peace at any price | and to condemn even defensive E warfare were Sarah Moore Grimke, and her brother, Thomas Smitn Grimke, The former was born tao Charleston, 8. C., Just a century and @ quarter ago to-day, Nov. 6, 1791, She and her sister, Angelina that kn ite call to © prob- fing asked what he would do ‘if he wero) Metter the Var thetite gO : fo would dc oro er tie Madge the te {n command at Charleston and that} 1 ml tit ok ta i’ aot sity wan attacked by pirates, he ro-| man in {Hinton of. phe pow piled that ho would marshal the Hun: rslan. a a a day achool children and lead them in| Alexander H, Stephen procession to moet the buccaneers, — |Maraeillaise of the Confederusyt the