The evening world. Newspaper, November 10, 1916, Page 22

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ae ees She Evening orld. D RY JOSEPH ft reas Publ w ¥ ark R PALIT 62 Park Row y, ANGI varie Row HW PULITZ 61 Pa . nicjawe Matter, En the I € ter Subseription RK to 1 ant the Continent World for the Unit tries In the International G and Canada ‘ostal Union Tine Year. 3 One M “VOLE F RE-ELECTED. v Wilton will be President of the OR fk United St r years Ww After the closest el the country has kifown since the Hayes-Tilden contest m 1870, the balance falls on the side of nation steadfastness and consistency, Ci nin has sottied it. Pluralities are of secondary importance, At thie moment) the great and significant fact is that, thanks to the voice of the West, the preseut Administration will continue without break to uphold the nation’s rights before the world and guard ite peace and prosperity at home. There is @ grace of sound, shrewd judgment, a knack of apprais- ing men and policies which comes to the country’s aid at critical moments. Even though the margin may have been sometimes of the narrowest, time and again this foree of indomitable good sense, applied now from one quarter, now from another, has pulled us safely through. What kept the earlier Mr. Bryan and his pack of tricks out of the Presidency? What has made Mr. Loosevelt, despite his popu- larity, an impossible candidate for any party again to put before the electorate? This time the saving slrewdness made itself felt from a new direction. But it has proved strong enough to withstand the des- perate pressure of a reinforced Republican Party, to nullify the effect vroduced by millions of Republican dollars and to keep the nation pushing ahead along the path of democracy and undivided rights, in- ead of turning back to experiment again with inequality and privilege Confronted with new foreign problems, struggling with a flood- tide of , it is not strange that many Americans stened to and felt themsely f won by the old Republican prem- y whert somebody will take care ommerce and indust ges of a walled and protected cf everybody cour olde West has brought the nation to with a shake and held it fo the open road of progress, So far as Mr. Wilson is concerned the result is still a tribute and A PreK tion a trilgte to his achievement and his leadership; a from an enterprising and progressive part of the Ameri- an people that he has expr@sed their purposes and their ideale. Time 1 to analyze results. Just now the frst feeling of ons of Americans is one of relief and*thankfulness at what proves ave been accomplished by that ever-ready margin of good sense in which they put their faith, —_- recognition enoug r all to national In time of stress only give Wall Street something to bet and it will keep cheerful and out of mischief. ——-} = ALL OF A KIND AT ALBANY. INAL returns in this State make it certain that Gov. Whitman on Blown Up!_ F can count on bigger Republican majorities than ever in both bramehes of the Legislature. In the last Legislature Repud- licans outnumbered Democrats seventeen in the Senate and forty-four im the Assembly. Next year the Republicans will have majorities of twenty-three in the Senate and forty-nine in the Assembly—a gain in etrength of eleven votes on a joint ballot. The State can accordingly make up fts mind to a Republican administration backed by an overwhelmingly Republican Legislature. ‘From the taxpeyers’ point of view the stage would seem to be act foes performance where reckless extravagance and random taxation might be expected to play leading parts. It should be remembered, bewever, that the campaign has borne heavily upon the financial weaknesses of Mr. Whitman’s first term, and that more persons than ever tn city and State are awake to the fact that economy is the crying need tp the edministration of both. The Governor may have the Legislature with him. Even eo, we do not believe he can afford to have the taxpayers of the State against tims. The latter, in this city particularly, are better organized than they have been heretofore. They are acquiring « confidence that commands attention and a voice that reaches easily to Albany. ‘The hyphen was equeesed thin as a hatr and blew away, a SIX MORE DRY STATES. ROHIBITION points to a proud day’s work on Tuesday. Either P by direct vote or by the election of State administrations pledged to a “dry” policy, six more States—Nebraska, Michi- gan, South Dakota, Montana, Florida and Utah—took themselves out of the wet columns, Qolorado and Arkansas rejected measures permitting a limited sale of liquor.” Alaska is said to have gone dry by a vote of two to one, In Missouri and in a mafority of places in Maryland where Pro- ibition was a local issue the wets had the best of it; and in Cali- fornia, though the final result is not sure, a heavy vote was cast Little Stage-Struc By Sophie Irene Loeb|™* “can't gqt away with it,” Omorigh, 18, ‘The Pres Publishing Ov. pruert ahs Oe ter been en When, oh, when will parents under- HIS woak two littio girle Afteon|*t#™4 that the Imagination of the and thirtorn respertively, de: 22Une mind Is liable to run away with scribed as “carrying @ arpl with consequent sorrow and dis- ailsd ite rouge, [cater for all concerned? Hundreds of aeaclin SBA chien wiris, thetr thoughts aflame with fu- theatrical make-| ture possibilities, find their way to the up, left their|"!S cty—and they never got back. | Shee after How many women live to tell the breakfast. anq|tie—ef how they longed for tho! started to walk to| 0'#%t Hihts and found them shining thie city.” only through the glaze of delusion? ‘They came from Like Caesar, they came, they saw; Baltimore, and but unilke him, they were conquered when balf way to| “"d cured. New York they|, Cured of the desire to shine in the meta. tarmer|""™Ament of stardom when hope died who took them to bis home over| jn gan” tuned te tapploat place aight. any vice committee, The good wife, the next morning, ; nay cee such Joyous one, hos) urged them to go straight home, but) OOre! TY : he great Broadway | they aid not heed, and finally secured | “Yg find. it only the big Fraudway | a ride on a train to this city talk to thelr children about the things | They landed at Pollce Headquarters] that tn: ite them to reash out, to be| and pretty aoon the Baltimore au-) *pmeuing they cannot age, arttien were a touen with the om: ee rite tee ead ae tea cers an jo Bt ere promptuly een: home to thelr parents. Tt ts the same old story of ignorant open book. Therefore it 1s most important, In- youth gone wild with Imagination. When, ob, when will girls who ought | ip the Conprighs, 1018, (The Mew Fiening World Daily Magazine Prbiishing Oo, Fon treniee World), Fifty Boys,and Girls Famous in History _ By Albert. Payson Terhune Oopyriett, 1910, by The Pro Publishing Co, (The New York Brening Work), No. 12—GIUSEPPI GARIBALDI; the Boy Adventurer. A | LITTLH Italian boy decided that hé was too old to hang afound | his native town, helping mend Msh-gets and caulk boat-seams sons at achool. The spirit of adventure was All the world lay a%ead of bim to explore, and study dry Ss hot in his veins, And he decided to explore it. Tho boy was Glusepp! Garibaldi, son of @ gallant sailor, Gtusepp! wanted to follow the sea, His fathor planned to make a pricst of Rim, and Glusepp! rebelled. He had deop reverence for the church, but be ha no wish to be a priest. A life of action called to blm. So he made up h He took into his confidence his two ohums, Rafacle Deandria and Cesare Parod!, assigning to each of them a sharo in the venture, Ossaro silver coins at his disposal—was to proviaon it Glusopp! was to bring along a bundle of other necessaries and was to act as captain of the ex- “Red Dragon.” The Mttle captain arranged that he and hie two comrades should ea!! further Mediteranean ports, Later, as they should pick up recruits at various cities, they wero to fight the Turks and the Barbary pirates, thinking. And he easi!y filled his chums with enthual+ mamnnmnnrnnnnn® oem over the great project. ven in those early 4 Youngsters. Of started tho Rod Dragon, before dawn, one spring morning, carrying {ta three tiny soldiers of for= weather, and, luckily, the woather was fair. They had sailed as far as Monaco, with no mishap, when they eaw @ far suers were Turks or pirates. But in elther cave youngsters were prepared to fight Ike heroes. absence of their little son& Questions wore asked, and in a whole story of the flight was known. The trio of parents chartered @ fast- Theirs was the boat that bore down upon the Ref Dragon off Monaco. Even when he was an old man Glusepp! never cared to talk much about “A vessel sont by my good father overhauled us and brought us back Twas terribly humiliated.” @ better adventurer than priest. So he bean to teach the boy navigation, Hoe also taught him the story of the!r unhappy country, was enslaved and oppressed by its white-coated Austrian tyrants, An@ in his heart dawned the dream of Free Italy—a dream he was one day to help 4 eecret eoctety of patriots among his boy frienda ‘When he was fifteen Garibald! made his firat regular crutee an @ eaflor. plenty of adventure for him now. For the Eastern seas were by no means pafo in those days, H's boyish desire to fiht pirat Hie Love captured by #ea-robhera, and escaped death only by for America. @hocr skill and courage ’ waiting for him—the carcer that was to be so full of pert! and hardships and that was to win > immortality, But many years Italy could be fulfilled. For eighteen montha during these exile yeare*he lived in Staten Island, where {n a small frame house he worked as @ candle. “Iam always happiest in A ca. The Am: 8 seem to understand me and my {deals for Italy better than any othors do." set him to learning Latin inatead of navigation. ‘ mind to run away to sea, was to “borrow” his big brothor’s fishing boat. Rafaole—who had several pedition. He renamed tho clumsy old boat, giving it tho warlike title of thetr boat to Genoa—a wonder-oity they longed to see—and thence te tho It was @ beautiful plan, according to tho boy adventurers way ot Three a he had @ way of inspiring poople to follow Lis lead. tune. All three knew how to handle @ boat, in fair larger craft bearing down on tiem. They could not be certain If the pur- Meantime, back at home, three familina were wildly ex sailing outter to overhaul the runaways. that capture. In hie memoirs he wrote briefly of tt: But the escapade proved to Garibald!'s father that Glusepp! would malo From his father and from other patricia Glusepp! learned how Italy make real. A flerce hatred of tyranny flamed up In him. He even formed In a few brief yearg he rose from foremast hand to captain. There wes we? was more than once gratified, Three times he was Onn All thie fitted for the rent career that lay of exile wanderings and warfare were to pass before his dream of a Free. maker. It {9 pleasant for Americans to remember that Garllald! onoe aid: k Souls ' oxpreasing every of Buman ao- tivity, sensation novela that con- front us on all sides, tt is small won- 4 the growing b with — posslb d possibilities that 1 to pass Contrary to the old adg are heard and seen very ¢ children n these days, And it is not easy to stem the current of curtosity, So that the big hope Hes in the guiding band of | the parent or guardian. our boys and girls that the em drama is only a story “i that. Impress your little girls who belleve they are young Mary Pick- fords that a star wasn't born tn a day; that in fact it 1s one of the most difficult things in the world to become a star; that thousands come to the big city and that but a few, only a few, reach the great goal, Make them understand that behind the footlikhts Is endless hard work and disappointment and deluston and often disaster, Show them how the funny man has the hardest time tn the world trying to be funny. * Have them appreciate that they only young once and that school and play are the best things tn the world for them and that danger Mes beyond if they attempt to be grown-up In thelr tender years. Keep youthful with them, good parents, until they reach the age of discretion, when they can discriminate for themselves and thus have a chance to wisely choose their coursts. feed vital, that their thinking pro- cosnes be directed aright to be enjoying the "Kiddie Klub Kor-| ner,” realize that they ave having the ——EEE What with moving picture shows, times of their lives right there In tho home-haven, and that ‘when they apread thoir Wings to got away thoy| Dollars a By HJ. nd Sense Barrett Keeping Executives on the Jump. |6er7 HERE are altogether too | many executives, who make 4 good showing for a few months after receiving thetr appoint- || ‘To-Day's Anniversary || HIS {ts the birthday of Oliver Goldsmith, o T vainst the & Qn } on rid) y feti of the pent igainst the State amendment rigidly restricting the sale and ueo of Aging th. Bosies ie ments,” said the President of a great intoxic who was born Nov. 10, 1728, organtzation, “and then proceed to Ir case, however, it looks as if Prohibition could claim tu] He studied law and medicine, but | relapse Into mere routine men. The Ly, out hea buman brain instrument. n nlisted twenty-five 0 ha Tinian. a ‘ not very sortously, and Jost heavily buman brain ts @ strange have now enlisted twenty-five States of the Union, a majority, under| .v une ‘gaming tables, nh having | think it was Emerson who remarked te banner, W the ssippi the dry sentiment is etronger|narrow escapes from tmprisonmens| tet We're all as lazy as we dare to than ever. There is no telling how eoon the wave may gather force|for debt. Next, with « flute in bh ome time ago I became conactous ‘ tn as the East hana nothing ty his pocket, ot a spirit of | uch seemed ¥ to be gradua our or ; , set out to see the Ww es be eee r f terests are wise they will study the situation long| dered over Germany, t Poiana ‘ Rai 1 and and ask themselves this question: Would the feeling| nd Italy, “Whenever I q thong of hat } ‘ ; 7 | 8 ouse toward 1 sing & against t of alcoholic stimulants ever have increased to its proa- | Peasent 5 eee proportionately greater speed, Now ft vat be mrote, "T piared one Most] it ig impossible for ma to be @ spe- | ent strength in various f this country if that eale had not| merry tunes, and that 1 me| been year after year attended with careless disregard of law and allowed to heeame asso foster th influences that isorder and crime? Would there be so many Anti-Saloon Leagues in the United States if American liquor interests had everywhere worked with t law 1 now against it? $e da Welllagton sald of Waterloo: “It was damned close,” \allat on every branch of our bnal- ness, That's what I have executives for, But because of the location of jmy offic, I keep fairly closely in touch with the office manager's prob- ome. Yne day Tread an account of what ad heen achieved in the offce of a se by careful selection, pay ped t not only a lodging, b for the day" In Inter years tiger an usher, an apothecary's assistant, a proofreader, @ poor physician, and jother things, but always on the v Like Bu F ly unfor ans that is why wh ne 1 in hie forty-sixth ore truly lamented 8, Goldsmi ate I clip, { to oor year, n wi appe 1 in a artivle When tho article turned up, I sent word to this executive that I'd like to see him, Have you any {dea about Inoreas- ing the efficiency of our seventy typists and a#tenographers?’ I tn- quired. He eaid that he hadn't; couldn't see but that everything was running smooth “You can easly cut expenses per cent, by applying the princ explained herein,” I remarked, and handed him the clipping. ‘Pat's from @ magazine to which you sub- cribe. Better read it more closely. “Then I called each man into con- | tely and explained why | ference sepa Nit was necessary for us all to Ine right up-to-the-minute, | “I want to see you men grow,’ sald. ‘From now on, every week I'x jwoing to send each of you a type slip, giving a digest of data I've learned about business dur. {ng the previous seven days, It won" comprise over two hundred words. | ~ And every week I want to recelve the report from eacn 0! | I tel you that tha’ my as. t which the office manager subsaribede year, real life ts different from | oO les what new has Increased the net{ figures {n Cnr ee Fork ventas Works) WISH we could afford to keep two maids,” anid Mra, Jarr as mily gathered around the| |supper table. ‘It would be nice to} |nave a=larger apartment where we | could entertain more and have a spare room or two for guests"— . “For your mother 40 stay with us, or Vacle Henry and Aunt Hetty from Hays Corner, and nestle down til ring planting? asked Mr, Mrs, Jarr. ‘I'm sure it's hard enough | to teach the children any mehnere— Wille, etop kicking the table leg! And Emma, don't let df spoak to you again about putting your fingers in the Hina beans—when you interrupt me tn the rudest manner!" “Bog pardon,” replied Mr. Jarr, dutt- fully, and composed himself to Usten “As I was saying,” began Mra. Jarr | again, “it would be very nice to have @ neat girl to walt on the table and an- swer the door, but I'd have no place for her to aleep, because Gertrude won't ven let the children go in her room ‘o play, she’s 80 touchy about her things. But, as I was saying, we can’t afford it and that enda it. Yet tt would | bo nice to have a quiet girl lke Hilda to take the children in the park and! | also watch them in the elevator.” “Hlevator? There's no elevator tn those figure-etght flats,” sald Mr. Jarn “And whom do you @ean by Hilda? “Why do you interrupt me so?” asked Mra, Jarr, pettishly. “Honest to goodness, I don't have half the trouble | with the children I have with you! I | was speaking of an clovater in case we | | moved into one of those handsome | apartment houses. They do not per- mit the children to ride up and down in the elevatora in the maxe exclusive ones unless the children are in charge of some one, and we'd have to have an extra maid, so I'd take Hilda.” “Again, who's Hilda?" asked Mr, arr, ‘She was the upstairs girl at that police captain's where Gertrude 1|Yorked before she came here,” ex- ,|Plained Mra, Jarr. e and Hilda {| never got along well together, because two girls never do unless they are sisters, and then sometimes they fight —— ES sore the knot” ts more than t t & phrase among the Hindus, ‘The bridegroom in Hindu-| stan bangs a ribbon around tha bride's neck and ties @ knot in the nd, Which seals his fate, Should! -|the young lady's father decide that | he 1s parting with the bride too cheap- ly he may forbid the tying ceremony, but once the ribbow knotted th: bridegroom hes no escape, t a ~ — worse. But when Gertrude left the place Hilda lett, and now liilds has left her otter place and ts looklnm for @ position. Of course, when there ts @ girl coming to your very du: tng for a place the girl you have gives no sigp of leaving you. It's always the way. I don't think Hilda can couk but she's very neat looking. If Ger- trude was to leave I’d take her in a] The te minute. She's Finnish, She's going| her head to answer an advertisoment thia eve-| Sor could. "Mrs. Jarre continued, fmpres- take Elshth Avenue oar— ext Dlock, ‘Take to that number, p. And be sure Make the car Make the conductor at it’s the right number, stop.” turn Hilda again and went hence. @ twenty minutes later @ pos nodded ning. I bope she doosn't take tho! lice 1 a street car inspector re place, Gertrude hasn't boen very tur ith Hilda @ sullen captive. iefactory of la: “Say, explain to this girl,” sald the Mre. Jarr made it ber business to qo | Inspector. “She's got the Elghth Ave- to the dining room and speed Ger- trude’s parting guest, She wished to leave the memory of a kind and eyin- pathetic mistress with Hilda. “And let me soo the directions,” Mra. Jarr went on. ‘9. 1678 Hlghth Ave- nue, Yes, that's the number, You can read figures, Hilda? nue line blocked, stopping every car, and Won't ride till she can get car No. 1674, She mys you told her to atop them all till she got that number!” Then Gertrude laughed 90 sarcas- ly that tt toolt the united efforts esent to separate the white | Just a Wife (Her Diary) Edited by Janet Trevor Copyright, 1916, by The Prom Publishing Co. OHAPTER LXXXIX. Cl EQ, lI undgstand how and ‘The New York Mrontng World doped when that taxt knoeked ta month ago, ‘albot got on to th - why I must keep on living, Ned | pay whe, he € xamined me, in the needs me |hospital, For a month I've been une Did mother have one of the pre-| “er his care. Tho habit had not eo. monitions of the dying in that last auired 6 fatal grip on mo, and for the « eont I'm free, tale we bad together? I remem-| “Lut 1 want to go where the otuft dered, and wondered, when Ned and|!# less easy to get. I want to go @ hed our long talk after ge came "680 life is simpler, where T won't home from her funeral, | ¥ eround with men and women richor than I I we At first we were silent in the twi-/cut out the Wall Street xunhtine, Nght, for I could not speak, All at) W!!! you go, now that"—he hesitated once, surprisingly, Ned asked: “Mol-|jergg' 9)? BOHR to keep you Ne, how would you like to leave New| York?" “When? Why?" I half stammered in my amazement, “Tell mo one thing, Ned." ] an. swered, “Have I tho right to go with you? Is thare—any one olset “You aro the only woman I or have loved, since I've } engiight away” De replied. "As tor |ho nnn steadily. of pen, rem me gees ollie, I'm afraid to|#nd done some things 1 want to ~~ get wh Then explanation came @ tor- [are + rent, @nd so many puzzles of the; past were made cloar to me, “Mollie, I have done those thing gynelt. But you I told wm, for which we @tart aM Lh "8m quiot little tow! which I ought not to have @ > Wont, whe in Ned began unateadily, “Once you anw An kell nine hey eam me when I had drunk too much, That opening, Noliia in maine to nite at same thing has happened on other |my old home and ive ine ldo eae ogcasions, What fe infinitely worso ts! mont, with Mar Ne oy " to take care o: Sho plans to tain the o: tn tans dergarten work, for sho | wants to 49 something Ith her . Somehow I am Jens uyneony hefora tol! ma of hin neeret ate m leaving the old japda- nd ome, tntluding ¢hia w : pats have been a victim of the drug “You remember I told you that I waa working on a ‘book which donlt with the treatment of drug victim At first I only studied my patient Then I decided to teat the potency of certain opiates on myaclf, Nea It warn 4 a mad thing to do. but I belleved tn. + tn tt any | My own etrength, ground ana gna: Per ies os 1 managed to keap down the|pandn wollbetne : ye and happ.asss, 1 lnm no longer a happy but rather use- wi dosage, but for wok and months I s My nervos joss bride, te, 1 was par took some of tho ae, and my temper suffored, ~| e ‘ H « \ i

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