Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Evening World Daily Magazine SZ Che EP World. | Fifty Boys and Girls }} ’ ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Pudlished Dally Except Sunday by the Presa Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to 63 Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row. J, ANGUS & Treasurer, 63 Park Row. JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr. Secretary, 63 Park Row. fice at New York as Second-Class Mattei E ning |For Engianad and Continent aw ‘All Countries in the International Entered at the Po: Gubsenption Rates to World for the United State and Canada sees $3.80) One Year. ++ 80/One Month. “GROUND ARMS!” N THE re-election of Woodrow Wilson lies a possibility so great, a hope of such*vast meaning for the civilized world, that every citizen of the United States should have it constantly before him as the supreme task to which the nation can now apply its ener- gies. Far from the battlefields of Europe a momentous victory was won last ‘Tuesday. By that victory 100,000,000 people were dedicated to the service of Peace. The United States again faces the’ world with the proof of a consistent, steadfast devotion to the policy | and principle of peace which no political pressure can now alter or put in doubt, Therein les power—relnforced, ready to be exerted. | The war grinds on. For two years and two months nations num-} boring 500,000,000 souls have been murdering one another's youth and manhood in the field, while at home they force every spare sinew | of productive strength to toil in the service of destruction, And there is no end. Kighteen million men have been slaughtered, maimed or marched away to be herded and held among hostile peoples. Throughout a whole continent #0 many wives have been widowed, so many children, left fatherless, so many shattered, disabled human frames sent home! to drag out a half existence, that the world is sick with the horror of il. And there is no end. | Men VVho Fail eigen, «By J. H. Cassel Famous in History By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1916, by The Pree Publishing Oo, (The New York Mrening World), No. 13.~-DANIEL BOONE, the Boy t ioneer. N eight-year-old frontier boy, who could neither read nor write, felt a mighty craving for an education. So he set out to educate A himeelf, but along lines that cannot be found in any present day school course, The boy was Daniel Boone, one of the eleven children of a Quaker farmer. He lived near Oley in Berks County, Pa. In 1743, the time when Daniel felt the urge for education, Berks County was a frontier region | between civilization and the pathless wildefness. Civilization did not |mean much to the child, but the wilderness meant everything to him. |So he proceeded to educate himself as @ woodsman. By listening to old trappers and by watching friendly Indians, he gradually learned every art of forestry. He could find bis way through trackless woods in the pitch dark; he could read any trall; he knew the habits and whereabouts of every woodland bird and beast. He became a skilled trapper; and even shaped a sapling Javelin with which he could bring down rabbits and partridges. Every spare moment was spent by him in the heart of the forest. Bo readily did he outstrip all bis brothers in forestry and self-reliance that when he was eleven his father sent Daniel and the boy’s mother away together, for the six summer and autumn months, to a desolate hill regio: far away from home, where together they tended the Boone cattle and made dairy products for winter. ‘The father intrusted his boy with a “Queen's Arm’, rifie at the same time @ 74 fourteen-pound fiintlock gun about six feet long. oo | The childish days of Javelin throwing were now past. Dantel during that summer tn the hills became a dead shot with his rifle, and in the fall he brought ° bome @ huge load of furs and other skins for the Philadelphia market. He took the joad of furs himself to far-off Philadel- phia to peddle them, Philadelphia at that time was merely a Quaker vil- lage, latd out In the pattern of a checker-board and with the foreste hem- ming {t in, but to the country boy it seemed a metropolis, In oplite of his awe of the place he drove shrewd bargains for his skins, and came back home convinced that there was more money In trapping and shooting than In farming. Henceforth be supported himself by his fur sales and kept his family supplied with meat as well, Education, When Daniel was fourteen his elder brother's wife taught him to read and write, From her he also learned the rudiments of arithmetic and « rough method of surveying land, That 1s about all the “book learning” he ever had. : A year later ho emigrated to the Yadkin Valley, in North Carolina, with his parents. Pennsylvania was growing too civilized to sult his frontier spirit, If he had had his choice of new homes he would have climbed the forbidding mountain wall of the Alleghentes to the westward and settled in the wild country beyond—the Kentucky country of flerce beasts and flereer savages, whereof John Finley, the scout, had told him so many wonder- ee his father was looking for a home, not for adventures, And Daniel's pathfinding journey into Kentucky was postponed, Yet he never abandoned his plan to make that perilous Journey some day, His true career was walt | One hundred billion dollars the warring nations have already epent in blowing men to pieces, in turning cities, towns and fields into desolation that no human being can inhabit. lhe war expenses of | France alone have risen to $21,000,000 a day. Colossal burdens of debt go on accumulating at a frightful rate—for unborn generations to pay. Still there is no end, Amid once prosperous peoples industries languish, food runs hort and is doled out to hungry women and children. ¢laxes mul- | fiply incessantly. Unfortunate small nations caught in the terrible! turmoil are ground to pieces. Serbia is ruined. Belgium must beg! for bread. Half the people of Poland have either been killed or have: starved to death. Yet there is no end. | — Even now, after more than two years of the most terrific fighting in history, no decisive victories, no conclusive movements, no pros- | pect of any euch! Only the continued grind of machinery which goes! on piling corpses higher and higher to no purpose. Kverywhere irre-| sistible attack meets invincible defense. Only the ever-mounting fig. ures of the dead measure a ghastly semblance of progress. Attrition, | ing for him beyond the line of hazy mountain tops—the career that was to make his name Immortal. The French, swooping down from Canada, were crowding the English wer and closer to the Atlantic and were eetzing the rich West for Gen. Braddock led a force of British regulars and frontieramen against the French and against thelr Indian allies, ——eeernr Daniel Boone, a boy of nineteen, went along with | An Escape i the expedition as chief wagoncr and blacksmith. Ha |} From Ambush. was perhaps the youngest member of the whol> Qa Dforce. ‘The thick-headed Braddock ted his litte army into an Indian ambush in a ravine near Pittsburgh. Braddock was killed and the bulk of his followers | colonists clos thelr own, oa | lain. When the fight changed to a massacre Boone cut st do i i ing, | dels | were captured oF eee horse, sprang on the antmal's back und galloped to 18 we are told, must do its work to the end, until at last a few tottering, , SVOCEStTEO WET NN the tathrough a hall of bullets. bleeding nations alone are left to gloat over others that lie prone. | Gen amar Cece “tnistoric boy,” two or three years older, also survived that mas- + Incredible! snore and lived to work miracles in his country's history, He was a Vir- ; i i i j % ter’s son—George Washington by name. One has only to listen to Englishmen like Lord Bryce and to the “I'm not going to put in long hours on any job that i'm not sure of. nls PANES Oe ee cee = sy German Chancellor to realize that a leaven of sense is at last working. —— - — — : Statesmen are ready to discern peace, even though they feel con- strained to sce it still afar off. Hear Chancellor von Bethmann- The Jarr Family _ Hollweg: - aes 3 Psa cee | eS Ewen 4 my “where do you, “Take a dollar out of my trousera =, | y i overy a a child vho are o1 ready | Gnorgu, 1016, ty The Pree Publasing Oo. | {zed wife and motber. hace hee | 4 : db: roger , come fully conscious of the horrifying destruction of life and | Oovugrigt, 1016, ty The trae Lublishing CO |, hulf the humillation 1 suffer be- | by the sentence, “We have nothing in| 66 ERE you are still in ey Laid get up and go to church eA a pts enureh, ak a property, then throngh the whole of bumanity there will ring aay Mush about. the | caueo of my trotters! meanndaseone | CUmtiD With each other! Gout 7O0 Gee UP iane Eo “Your church or my church?" as! ; 4 out a cry for peaceful arrangements and understandings which, | as far as is within human power, will avoid the return of such | & monstrous catastrophe. This cry will be so powerful and | 60 justified that it must lead to some result. This is not the carlier German notion of war as a tonic exercise for nations. church?" asked Mra. Jarr.| 1 yore now altting up in bed. “That's too much! They're only chil~ looking in on ber husband Sunday] ny yi: care what church you go\dren. Let them take some pennies’ morni to, so you set a good example to your} hey couldn't get tn a moving pice mumbled the} Oy iron," was the reply. ture show on pennies,” remarked Mr, sluggard, “Why don't YOU 60 to} vei’ gon: YOU go?” asked Mr.|Jarr. “Why begrudge your church chureh? You're up? Jarr “You should be ashamed of your- 4 iverybody else is going to church.” |" wisi can 1 go to church?” sald] self comparing church to @ moving replied Mrs. Jarr, but Ignoring his} yi. soe, ats Gertrude’s Sunday out | picture show,” sald Mra. Jarr. “That woman who nags, and now especi comes a letter from a young girl who has sut- fered much from @ nagging broth. | the I never interfere with his| When sifted right down to the bot- 8, so I can't account for his} tom, It is found that tn the early days they became separated both from in- been féreed now to change | difference and selfishness, It is bad on, and in order to bring|bUsiness—this disregard of family er. } aro this change I am going to|':e8=t that are strongest in the In fact, so much | marry a man L dislike, [know 1 will| 26 of sorrow, ties that, when cher- so that in order never be happy with him, but this ts| S264, strengthen all the years. How | At any minute may come a subtle further change in the attitude get away from | tie onl action T ean give the}much they mean ta nut realized be. | ‘fect question, “It's terrible that) 1.4 'r nave everything to attend to.|indicates the reapect you have for of European ministers, a change borne of pressure from exhausted ri fess ire a ane veinetere ay Pees rey: rig }cause they are lost, you ils ane a this alge: me ning. It's) 1... pean dressing the children to get| religion! qe Ee eee nations, a change due activ » gr aaherata ¥ Pinta appear pals ee There is many a brother who, by | JUSt lke being a heathen! them off to church, too, You might| Mrs, Jarr raised her voice, People _ a oe me ae fe atanapes ne grim and a perate marrying ® mun the ot th mister Whole: almaye in| oe) ti B. Moler whe Pes Pagan!" corrected Mr Sarr] iivy got up and hisiped me, and if|always do when they dlscuss thelr . t uggle must annihilate somebody and nearly annihi ee RY A r Ther own friends, and perhaps wrong-| “Heathen connotes savagery, 48-1 54. nud you could have gone with| beliefs, Mr, Jarr remembered how Jate everybody, to a belief that rational human beings can work out Want, Bho say any girls sulfer as T do, thelr tut one ch @ brother only wakes | Pornee: sloth”-— {inem. It's sinful not to go to church] easy it was to get in an altercation Ricstesas it ; _ “Your articles in broken as pis, Tell the! up when tho crash comes to her You connote sioth, all right!” 40-1 114 way,” when church was the topio, And he an adjustment that leaves a larger proportion of them alive, | aay Evening, brothers, lady dear, to leave their sis- | "Aen she has done something of| terrupte rs, Jarr. “Get up and 60| 111 ger up and help with things it! anewered blandly: “No, Ido not mea To hasten that change, to be ready to take fall advantage of it when World have Intors | ters alone, If they won't take them | (ich eu eheeane Sh BSPOURE UES chUtS you want to go to church," said Mz.!to make any comparison of the sort {t comes, should, from now on, be the special alm of the Government of °*°4 Me many evenings, They have out and introduce them, is Ita gtrt’s| "any we a young man will Aght|. “BUt belng pagan," Mr. Jarr ram- * |Jarr, "Go on and get ready at all, But, as we do not pay pew the United States, | Gaught many a good le to me, but fault that she has no men friends?” |to protect the Welfare of somebody | bled oa, “ab, that meana the glory | | ' eaiieP eect! @ the grandeur|,< it tervible,” Mrs, Jarr went on; rent or otherwise help the chureh, we : z you have never written a proth=/ Very little can be added to the ap- ter, totally blind to the same | that w ireece and the grandeur |wsindays come and Sundays go, and! should put as much as we can afford During the first months of the war President Wilson extended |ers who have sisters that s ay at| peal of this writing | his own, |that was Rome, Maidens with flowers | a ne TPA i 2 ribution box." { to the bel! } , . r i iat | ety Hee | » youth should resp and pro feel asp before the|¥® &re like regular infidels. in the contribution box.’ 0 the belligerents this Government's offer of mediation, Now, wit! ane Bee bal doe j In truth, there are so many broth- womanhood wherever he finds it, |8¢@ttering the blossoms = b shame and a dingrace. “Let the rich people do that,” eal@ | “Lam writing you this | | +, font . ter so thatlers who : : \ Gharit 0 “gin at} altars of the grand old gods the significance of his re-election present to all minda here and in| r so that who know so little about their, unlike charity it should begin aty # ¢ ge £04 be Wrap tk candal- | 82ould keep us from gotng to church, | Mrs, Jarr, N'lt's got so now that folke Retecra, tas fitting dimede canew t ee ‘ you, in your kindness, n warn! sisters, who pay so little attention to | DUMe: i a d ___"Edward Jarri" eried the seandal- Jand you know it!" Wn ace oathiaie amcaied tae Reta surope, bi ing time to renew hat o er and with it to express | brothers who are driving their sisters the sister of her friends that, though = ae — —— {| “Why don't you go, then?” asked|church because they know better the earnest wish of this country to see Europe at peace, }to do many things against their will.) they are iving in the same hom Reflecti sof Bachel C ] |] |Atr Jar “vou seem to want to go, dressed people will be staring at thelr Let the President, in the name of the people of the United States, to meet desirable young men, tai no real r eae | hose nero op ‘ nila h " lothes,* le yo me am ers » no real compantonship. a & “L ha t y' , that’ sp 01 ave nice clothes, make this effort, Now Is the moment. Who can say how far-reaching, |not and cannot be a flrt—it Ia not im a myand Sethe By Helen Rowland __ aS ae sen res pein bod Ripraeer spat from the point of view of clvilization, may be the results? |menaud tha conspauscon deithat cis sag since I’ t » that nat! brothers KEEP NAC a oe teat ee er marriage drift apart and are | Qupyreht, 1916, by The I’rse Publishing Co. (The New Yoru Evening World) | 90 long since I've been to church that That's why I want them to go te s | Seat ul val Lao lepien ALL SUALLY a girl's indignation, like a man’s consclence, 1s merely ac-|!'™ ashamed to Go, and It's all your! church,” remarked Mrs. Jarr, "E ' H ts F S Ae 4 beau but you; they: In these days we often hear about} fault.” Mrs, Rangle to see that its rom Sharp Wits and ¢ and own|wisters and br nil cessory-after-the-kiss, <a Oe . | ARE ae ES eee | A little patriotism is a dangerous) In the annals of hlatory there ts no Ae F noh Bes cbilaran gan arene ae well: as hare thing. —-Boston, Transerint such thing as the return of a prodigal umbrella.--Memphis Commorcial-Ap- stopping you from going to church."|on Sunday.” “You are so," said Mrs. Jarr. “In-| “You give them the dollar,” sid deed, I wish I could go. But you lie! Mr, Jarr, “and next Sunday I proms abed Suffdays, and that puta back| ise you I'll get up and go to churcd |breakfast, and then I have to look| with you." Life has not yet lost all its zest for @ girl, whose | after the children and the house. It's “Oh, all right,” replied Mra, Jarr, K heart still leaps at the sound of the tinkle of the tele-| terrible!" “Run along, children; but you get The lonely, restless Sunday-afternoon-in-thecity has driven more men into the impulsive Sunday night | proposal of marriage than all the love in the world. The news is never as bad as the] pes newaboys would have the world be- ee Ueve.—Toledo Blade, ea Dollars and Sense By H. J. Barrett re ny Of our pleasures are harder niin that which segins hard be A small friend of ours confided to} cause we hav y us the other day that elther the cost | nal sala pug at Of tanning had not increased or else . his father isn't practising rigid econ- Everyday Eng ih in Sales Litcra-, small town merchant | \ 7 ly educated n ie phone, Just then the children came in and4| that dollar changed at the dru, tor h lke tabasco, should ture, | wards ix city bred and doe | . se omny.—Philadelphia Inquirer SIAC ARDRRG?S, ABOU BO ai ig ghee oe chek aducac| ere maclty pred ant a ood the Mttle gir) asked for money to put | and put ten cents each In the box and | : = - \ H Manas Wlaliinic: close cat ata | furell aaclionasteaa teen ier tetas It’s a wise man who buries bis dead loves so deep |!" the contribution box, bring me home the rest.” Letters From the Pe ople | rr i many small olty and suburba: o ou r iat," 9 that thelr ghosts have no chance of arising and putting | 1 the Vice Preside »w I no! Free Course in M: - ” , fechantoal Draw ate’ Examinations are also wel hat Edwards uses suc him out of countenance at critical, psychological | T Da Pe ent © To the Kaitor of The Evening World | Pathe sohoaltin’ nonsenstarina ana "It's good stuft all right," he con: | departmental. taognleratane fase | moments, o-Day's Anniversary ® On account of the great demand for|open t 4 On-s¢ jan and is} tinued. "Lt begin to believe that th . D of iat me -—— 4 and for) open to persons of all natio 0) athin ‘the: sallnia 0 of latent and un- F HE first war bet a, . trie or Now York, | American citizens} {SAA} courses as a training Cor business, | few bachelors’ hearts, i a } The Grace Chapel Iniuaitiah Sthaghty| Hees BEAU WASHBURN, supe, | PENH, Planned and prepared ‘hai | "1? 1 walked into Bl Jenktna's gen-|‘® MAK® AB Impression on a few bachelors’ former country against the|and invade Bulgaria, He waa given | No, 415 East Fourteenth street | Gove * Le iestion involved batare he'd recitsne | eral store to-day in the llttie town in eae ; latter thirty-one years ago to-day,|@ warm reception, for the Bulgare | Hirst Avenue, has again of Tide Mate tee ee eee |inoe Beems. toc nsvar une oldinie| Which A waa Born and taiked that way| A woman'a eonsctence is a thistle tn the side of her vanity: « man's t8| quout two monthe before. there had| erase aa one man and the Sorte were | / en Coen ct reek yor F) What ia the “how, when ang Slant toward disteibution problems.” that I'd ¢ on ranys And | merely a rubber band—warranted to stretch as long as he is intorested, and | peen @ sudden revolution in Easter | flung back. In the battle of Bitvedtan * cated in bettering Manele tae any | Where” of Government bonds, particu. (22a Btunted ti of withon Want our goods on’ Bill's| to tighten up painfully only when he ts beginning to be a little bored. Rumelia, and that province, a buffer] the Serblans were totally routed, end on Monday evening at 7.30 o'clock for tare jnecarnan te ey Ake, & ROOd and pb 18. 88 BUA tatitaaeaaa lt - mate created by Austria to prevent | livldndy wus eaved from capture only @Apstivction, | Matcriais “and. inatru: |teyeogp eMeeNe FOF the mall tn-| in s natn frequent intervals. seg tho Word TautHovees he eet | Men used to sigh for a girl who had never been kissed; but, nowadays, | the sggrandizemant of her Balkan| ue imorvention of Auntria. ‘The Wadividual instruction is ‘given by |,,N: He-The bonds of any state d for five ininuies exp! exactly what it meang and| they haven't much time to waste on one who can offer them no better | neighbors, was annexed to Bulgaria. ai! the Balkan States small and weal, »4 ~ ne, | Government are considered a good in- Now then,” said the old man, look-| why it's & good tdea to speed its Great Britain approved the consol!-| and #o on this occasion he acted SEE Wale shonid be ct nent: a than the purchase of United States “Ord of eriticism except for the vo-| ‘utilization’ are calculated to inspire . fi an War Bulgaria wae defeated Ra peung jd dh pastioutar inte rd | bonds. eabulary and the fact that Kdwards| resentment in the hearts of the mas | ‘A man never can believe that a woman has actually made up her mind | "led the Russian officers who had | seria and her allies, and she Teta i 2 mand plan roading and making, such | overditimates the dealers’ knowledge | jorit Jistributers, and that] bably because {t 1s so hard for him to concede that she HAS any mind commanded the Bulgarian forces, uted by joining the Central Powers Vas machinists, plumbers, st thor, | To the Rditor of The Krening World id ks y yore Millions of dollars’ | ti " Vii admit ta rene ably becau L *| Whe Serbian monarch, Milan Obren- | In the present war, Now the Borba Mae patil scrtnre vee a f vs (worth of goods are sold in this coun-| abl i lated into —— witch, looked with Jealous eye upon! ?@ Strlving to reconquer thelr doune hl ould President Wilson have to try by men who have never heard the sin, averviday fo 4 Engt i 1 or ye upon’: d tho old hay cand oaae developin, patents, ‘take the aath o€ office if he were ward’ turnover” aauitea to enstn tel fatonateneatts gue abot Goouinnas | Many a man’s home-coming kiss ix merely his peaceat-any-Driee | the growing power of a neighbor. jar Ane Mie ole besneg more seey i" for Civil Aervice and elected again? V.@ but pastry. lof dealera™ jotering. ‘WMb the army of his rival deprived than ever, % POE oe: ‘ “i