The evening world. Newspaper, January 30, 1917, Page 16

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tania ted i A tl Bla th a Evening World ¢ ’ Ca ‘ TT — _ —— “ Che et Ait Gelorld | His Peace Terms! Fifty Boys and Girl Ps | Pubtisnea Dally Baeept supaay hy toe Pret ‘pubitahing Compan, Nos. $3 0 z x = sae o = incten tine. , , a . Fa mous In H istory ; } RALPH PULITZDR, President, 62 Park Row. | Tey Minne, em, “, aioe ay Yh hx Fs Nie “ 3 ig P Terh i, ue sonics PULSEAR Serer ats, aba how, BREA IO Se Sieh ala: Bh ; ae By Albert Payson Terhune § tered at the Post-Office at New York as Becond-Class Matter, ee 7 h zg . World.) (Budseription Rates to The Evening|For England and the Continent and) Copyright, 1917, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening ‘World aid Cheah States al beatae’ 2 | higae es No. 44.—FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE, the Girl Nurse. ‘One ¥ sees $2.60] One Tear ve $9.78 LITTLE Derbyshire girl used to find odd ways of amusing hereelt (One Month.. CO 80) One Month,. u o during her summer vacations, While other children of the village WOMUME Te iscsvisisvevccrescscccvevevsvecnescNOs 20861 | and neighboring country were romping or gossiping this young I » . ster was never so happy as when she could find some animal to nurse back to health. . She was Florence Nightingale, daughter of the Squire of Lea Huret, Im 1832, when she was only twelve, she rode across country one dey om her pony and chanced to meet a shepherd who worked for her father, The man’s face was «rim with sorrow. Florence haited her pony and what was the matter. “ ‘The shepherd explained that his beloved collie’s leg had been broken wy a etone flung by a cruel boy. “The dog 1s in agony,” he added. ‘So I'm on my way for @ stout cord strangle him and put him out of his pain.” Without a word Florence galloped on to the shepherd's hut. There found the big dog writhing in anguish. | She had no practical experience in surgery, but she had what was fay | better—an inborn genius for nursing. OM GROPING ITS WAY BACK? OINCIDENT with the official announcement that Gen.| C Pershing has been ordered to march his expeditionary force} ' out of Mexico comes news from Mexico itself of a call for the} election of a Mexican Congress to be held the last Sunday of nest) month. It is hoped that a Presidential election can be held in March} end @ constitutional Mexican President installed by May 1. Nobody pretends that Mexico has been made over. Carranza is} etill Carranza. He has not captured or even weakened Villa. He} has continued foolishly distrustful of every effort made in his behalf | by the most powerful and disinterested friend his country ever hud.) . : ‘ ri a he examined the collie’e Ime Nevertheless, in its own fitful, jealous way, Mexico may be straggling j A Girl's i dane aw tite srinely hy cana wil not broken, but | back toward something approaching orderly and responsible self-gov- Strange Gift, 3 that the out from the flung stone was 60 deep that the ernment—which is the only thing the United States ever asked of it i leg was helpless. | Back came the shepherd with the cord. Worence ordered him to throw | It away and to set a kettle of water to boiling. Then she went to the wall where hung his one clean smock, and she proceeded to tear it into strips. . | She had read somewhere of the value of “hot compresses” on swollen wounds, and she decided to try their effect on the suffering dog. AM dag and every day for a week she sta: at the hut, renewing the compreseey fam soon as they began to cool, and dressing the cut with salve and -) In spite of all that Carranza has left undone or bungled through his stiff-necked pride and his ridiculous resentment, he has, nevertheless, managed to restore a certain amount of law and administrative ma-| chinery in places where they were desperately needed. | So far, however, as better feeling toward America goes, the Juarez) riots of last Saturday show that popular hostility toward “Gringoes” is till as intense as the ignorance that begets it. | And there, so far as the United States is concerned, is the crux of the whole Mexican problem. The only expeditionary moves that can ever fully solve it must be those of education, Nor would she abandon her odd task until the dog was entirely well again, ‘A few months later she gave up an afternoon's jollity to tend @ with a broken wing. People soon began to bring her their injured pets Sor treatment. Her father being a wise man did not Join in the general laughter et Bis little daughter's queer tastes. Instead he had an outhouse fitted up as @ hospital where she could take care of her animal patients, The villagers began to call her “The Little Sister of Mercy.” Thep flocked to her with their troubles, their sorrows, thelr afiments, She Bee longed to the rare type of girl to whom every one naturally turns for pathy and for help. She was as sunshiny and lovely as the wonderful Italian elty where ge had been born and for which she had been named, In those days nursing was crude and amateurish, Florence realise@ that more lives can be saved by good nursing than by all the on earth, And she decided to devote her whole life to this profession. She could find almost no one capable of teaching her in England, here again her genius helped her in making her understand by inetinet what sort of care sick folk needed. Then hearing of a school for nurses just started at Kalserwerth, in Germany, she went axe? eS H thither to study. | STHO AGG! i An English girl of wealth and good family was got of Se Cones » Supposed at that time to take up any career or means bade of livelihood, So Florence's strange choice of a life g work was greeted with horror by most of her friends. But she persevered, Refuting Lawson {s so far the season's most engrossing indoor sport. GRAYFISH. U's a new name the long despised dogfish at last finds} himself officially welcomed as a nutritious article of diet and| a first-rate ally in the fight against the rising cost of living. Last spring the Bureau of Fisheries tactfully introduced che ~ vagabond of the seas whose scientific appellations even, Squalus acanthias and Acanthias vulgaris, kept him out of favor, under the) more engaging title of grayfish. Since then the packers, the retail trade and the public have treated him with increasing respect, until] Secretary Redfield of the Department of Commerce now announces | that packers of grayfish estimate the present demand to be tenfold) the available supply, and that one large jobber in the Middle West bas just placed his fourth order since the fish was put on the market in Novembr. | The Crimean War broke out. Sickness and pestilence killed soldiers | " . * . by the thousands—until Florence Nightingale took charge of the hospitals, | article of good food, Experiments have already been conducted far) delete : e 4 amen ~ 5 - \ Snub the Worker The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell I * (O eth mwa tammy And presently came her chance to prove her worth to humanity, enough to show that “a can of grayfish provides about the same quan- = tity of nutriment as a can of medium-grado salmon, containing a S W h little less protein and a little more fat.” no b Ss ee 0 ‘The fate are digested in about the same proportion as those A ope ar Rcauiia if ssa Pasiubinn 0 Miss Genevieve | tured Mrs, Jarr: “but, real wer- a t on the job! | fact, most of them—came from these | Copyright, 1917, by The Prees Publishing Co, | the person of the song Miss arr; “but, really, my Ift- of other animal foods, while the incomplete analyses show that By Sophie Irene Loeb. MRIRIED ena eu eared eines Fach | so-called lowly trad (The New York Evening World.) Jones, And our allusions to the ac-|tle girl tx too young to go away ‘te the digested porteins will at least exceed 90 per cent, Coornett. 1917, by Toe tree Pubisting Co. | ongshoreman was not working when! xamrene common carpenter, ‘Ay|66(>)CR methods are modern,” | yvities and adjuncts of domestic| school; she'd miss her mother” This is pretty good for the old dogtish that for generations has! (The New York Evening World.) our “ship comes in." 1 have said before, no one may said Madam Ketchum, of} science embrace the most modern| The visiting solicitor for the em- f fied ae LONGSHOREMAN, who asks| Think what conditions would be if| throw stones, for every one lives in Ketchum's Klassical Kin-] method, To illustrate: pensive boarding kindergarten: eoulé been cursed by fishermen for chewing their lines and nets and biting me not to print his name and|the drivers of the city gart wag-|* glass house, dergarten. “I would say moral,” she] 4. 1. 1s en ayant not gainsay this, ; A 4 ° ‘ erage Was: | vere are. temptatio: very | y “ “Oh, is the we wash Our) opie , holes in the strings of fish they prepared for market. The dogfisn, address, writes me as follows: | ong went on strike for any length of | tray yer nee ations In every | added. “But that i didactic, one| "© patties RASS SY. | “But,” she added, “our very wealth is nothing more or less than a small-sized shark and swims to make Will: you help|time! Or any other group of work-| them and irmavelled in the path of peg illest wr daa appre. | Wash our clothes! aur eae aids ond et % H P me correct public | ¢ 0 he! 0 Itve, honesty may hold his head high and| Mrs | wy; ral | to us, and the terms—the terms are trouble. Thousands of fishermen on the American coasts will be optnion Hy the dle higbeege eeeqdeires aaanta LOOK EVERY MAN IN {THE BYE, | clative but non-committal way, as she With an electric washer, SO reasonable—only three prdctherdy ; | c ‘ ° he longsho: and-owner. A ~ 1 amazed and delighted to hear that he has become a real member of | longshoreman? | pendence, especially In a great city) At least It 1s most evident. In this| 4 Rot quite understand 1f what was|“On, this ts the way we sweep our | dollars a year, sea society with a value that makes him worth going after. | “He 1s a very| where the law of supply and demand free country. Efficiency, gervice, is} Moral and didactio and therefore floors, | “Oh, it isn’t the money,” sala Mra. ; : ari a sivch) abused: acd lena waric ovartine, the thing! a tora | MazVictorian should be praised or] Sweep our floors! |Jarr, “I do not consider the money, canneries. The catch of other kinds of Pacific fish has been poor this He ts rough in his}gon tn that trage means something to went to the funeral of his colored] | We will fay ethical then, ethical.” lon, this te the way we roast our meat, | {7 Jet you know." And she towed . ao . f } i said Madam Ketchum, “You know the visitor out. season, but the Puget Sound packers are canning so many grayfish way, because ofthe welfare of some one else. When | Jatitor and mourned ply oat j . ; Roast our meat! Atal thie had Aleseulty inakeeiive- enooah eee nae his work, but| you run it all down, each ts very de-| jantiord hut ‘he wan a ees oe Fee at eee ee ca een: | SYIGH © fivelenn Sookeny | That evening she told Mr. Jarr afl y y g 8 there are many pendent on the other to keep Ife in| man to recognize and honor his|*0U'® that pulchritude ts most profit- jabout it, Mr, Jarr made no reply Mediterranean countries have eaten dogfish, or the Mediter- . who are raising its even tenor from day to day, Thus| honest and faithful worker, ope , “Oh, this 1s the way we darn our socks, | except to hum ; f ; oy fi le: . “ ng ” | ood citizens do the same, 6 lady visit hi rn ks! ” es . ranean cousins of the family, since the days of Rome. Fishermen} g00d: tamniiion and can be no “sorry trade,” except] syst vecause a. few longshoremen| eq to say “Hones ashes brie hb id al | "How docs ane think we'll selmi fe are ashamed to acknowledge their oc- of the criminal sort, |have proved worthless is no reason to say “Honesty Is the Best Pol-| With an automatic mending attach- dough, of the British Isles have also long eaten them, both fresh and salted. | cupation on account of criticism, | ‘The old tdea holds good to-day, | for casting aspersion on the OTHERS, | €¥-" Her phrase for it betokened ment to our motor driven sow-| Raise the dough, raise the dough? Smoked they are said to be excellent. “Visit tho docks and taik with & There are good and bad in every field | Kight-thinking people will, not. The & more exquisite choles of words. ing machine! in Cay private mint? ‘ " ‘ as ‘ : : rest do not matter, The less notice| “No,” she repeated, “we do not! § 1 ” | So ea ne morning!" American housekeepers have had no dealings with the dogfish. | few of them. of endeavor, Some of the gres eat | you take of such snobs the better , io eerily 1p (he morning “I attended a dance this evening souls the world has ever known—in seek to Impress the Immature mind,| “I'm gure it i most interesting and | js 4, no,'8 Wondering why the world he and was getting along nicely until upations is so full of profitable oc} But as the grayfish, pleasant of name, tasty, nourishing and cheap, he| ana was getting along nicely until | -—_—_———_ ! — we seek to improve with the ques-| instructive for the little pupils,” ven-! whose basis 1s bunco, bids fair to become a table commodity of importance. jsome one spread the story that = Honable philosophy that pulchritude | — sicsaiimsniadih cies was @ longshoreman, Then I was ||| B: h ] : ] R fl . | ts profitable, In aah tt often tg not. sa". do f : “Why, yes," si rs, Jarr, now |enubbed—given the ‘cold shoulder, | acneior ( Mr e ections rari bea Foie ae Y 2 d Y J b The “Alaskan Q' ” who buncoed Broadw: nt | you might say, Now I do not think “4 es P ouan our re) o “Alaskan Queen” wi incoed Broadway got a milion i 1 words, "I belleve too that we should| dollars’ worth of publicity, Broadway was tickled a million i Hae ie ipeocce By Helen Rowland Fel innoh children tnvan riant beatons By Willis Brooks dollars’ wor! Bi y ; 3 ER ——$—$———— ~ DAY ; B al eRe See ee |agcount of his trade ts Just what the O fall in love is to increase your capacity for happiness—and minimize ‘ M : ; : ‘ penis ic ; ter to err by offering high- Hits From Sharp Wits [name implies and deserves no con- | | SrnvoHancataravee eating Ih There we have the ethics of tt, and Article No. 8 to'the rich’ Stout oeen, peeemoeda Re bccn ab agate daoe van Fn ep Lae kos the Mderation. ‘To the worth-while elt. ‘ | hence, as you coincide with me, you INES anes Und tetra antly flattered by being na 4 Try | a very door yo! ne touch of winter makes the 4). not the trade but the ened : their prospect's viewpoint, This | the matter of wealth, Heron Or them te sure to opon.—| whole world chill. —Bultimore Amert- in i a E ae es os peaanee Going {nto matrimony with a lot of theories on how Hout SOS EON DBL Se Se ie what makes selling over the| being underrated, Dut sae aley joston ‘Transer! 0 provided - ; i oe fom oe jan honest one, to control a woman is like starting out to run a motor) 4), impressive visitor, counter more difficult as well as A successful salesman in one of thi An automobile is not a necessary! A contemporary advises boys to large stores of New York tells me accompaniment to the leading of a|get married young. And have It over car on the strength of a book of rules. “But my little girl ts too young to| more interesting than selling to the] that when he is In doubt aout ine In this age, where there ts so much 2 at a ena pba 4 ” trade, The travelling salesman hag} financial position of a prospect thy Pe gp am, rll nll 1 BN; TOS POUR ORG Day to do, Where life is one beehive of |} go to @ boarding school,” faltered ‘ i ) But it often te, ) basic sical! Valin industry, every man's trade counts Now that it has become practicable to take an X-ray | Mrs. Jarr. only to convince his prospect that the bering with a medium-Beige artiele\ Thin buying pltn St pve dottara| Bertha continue to think of in many Instances the seemingly , Photograph of a bad tooth the next step will probably be! “yes, but think of the advantages | £0048 Will sell at an attractive profit.) ing to its reception. He makes this down nnd five dollars when they cateh [po other Man, locked Be een ites [lowly trade t# the most tmportant to] 4is to take a photograph of a man's conscience and a! of the association with ohildren of|, The counter salesman has 4 mucn| beginning rather adroitly by casually ¢ 60 aplendidve| oon the world moving. i : r : i harder task, especially in a large city, | !4ying out the medium artlele with- you keeps the housekeeper on the| Toledo Blade, » | ) Woman's real age, | her own social status,” said the vial-| | a hc acat }out a word, as if it were the first Jump.—Philade|phia Inquirer, = re ae i eae Think what would happen {f the| " A eee tor, “nothing but millionaires’ cbil- hot mee ee Hes - are | thing that came to hand—someth! would be a cruelty to the den sss : — y ; : atk pa rangers to him. Ie POF | for the prospect ook ito fome of us the ululele ts a mus |to ask where you buried the remains >) Love Is not actually on the wane until a man begins are AONE a quick glance | ‘Unity to get tips from others on his | while he is getting out the teal thing pic: ument of auricular puntsh-|of your ear resolutions,— to look absent when he {s present. | ) i . e > It ds then that he watel lose | ment.—Memphis Commercial Appeal. | Memphis Commercial Appeal Seoecerr — (0 Io) ent whe » around the modent apartment and|>fospect’s likes and dislikes, He en pak he Watehea aaa ly, without appearing to d must grab this knowledge tnstantly— ’ 4 s 10 80, for ai out of the air. He must judge from | |idlcation as to whether sonsetht it acutely the high} the garb, the manner, the language of or something cheaper Letters From the People i ae thirtieth of Janu. ol if th iilionaires’ childr After a bachelor's heart has been patched up, cut down and remodelled | See Bite fra hee y was anne chaarrectincBarland cen fit the romantic ideal of one girl after another, there is seldom enough | cost of living, as the parents of the| the prospect what kind of foods ure wanted, » Ase Awkwa' editorial page under caption of Dole Gay of mourning tor Ghavies Lo left of it to go all the way round the honeymoon, Jarre children did, most likely to please him or her and | yy, . “4 To the EAitor of Pie Brenig World lars and Sense" in book form? sr ERE Ae TO A EOE Se an eee | “We make everything pleasant for| What, sort of selling methods to Why Oil Will Calm the Waves. Your decision on the following will B. | . “ : ; the children, of course,” the lady ot ‘not e REQUENTLY we hear the ex- | " | During the whole of the day the pre . , sf % ' vi | the children, a jady it is not enough that he put himself ex. be appreciated: Te the Bee Te eee Wee RCUAaE (caeiratles twee TDbaeamin |i Fri ne tile PAN apart, te i * a “1 ne from growing) 1... modern school went on. "We even|in the other's place, Tastes diffe Pression that some one ate ists © ine patted 4b cna | 2 ; f " ped 1) cold—unless, perhaps, you can keep it in a thermos bottle, paraphrase all the old folk-voca-| What would please him, if he were oil upon the troubled waters,” Please days June 8 | black, religious services were held, | on the other side of the counter, | which ts linked th the diseov: by the President, Mr. -———-, there! 1844, Oct fell and no meal of any sort was per- - | tional songs. Do you romember the} OM 11° 40! possible customer | thut ofl poured overboged ‘rom a iD being present Mosars John Janse, Te n OK. mitted until after midnight If che average man only had @ little more “nerve” and fewer nerves old nursery rhyme of Miss Genevieve | away, Some sales are made and|in distress will tend to increase ite | Beare, are Aen ool Fe ro the nase neater, Frida: Charles I, was beheaded on a scaf-| be Could conquer any Woman with one hand and his eyes shut. Eve has! Jones?” frome ave binoked by telling brospecls fitety by stopping the waves trom | Smith, David Jones, &., fo | 2 ee Felt segs Mada tod fold built In front of the banqueting never forgotten that she was only a “Rib,” and when Adam forgets it sue! “You don't mean ‘We're Going to | ¢, OR or) breaking against the ship's. side, | MA ag i yet On what day did Jan, 2, 18%, and a Lal y Bi By cakes.” Some people like to follow| This Is due to the fact that the oli! ea Pavia Jones, Ac." } Jan, 6, 1894, fall? ANXIOUS, all at Whitehall, A great, curious| makes him feel like a small part of the vertebrae. See Miss Jinny Aun Jones'?" asked) the crowd; others want to be ex-|1s composed of molecules which are My friend insists the last is correct. | With “0” Between Rust and Date, crowd assembled to witness the| ethan Mra, Jarr, who had played this song|clusive, It 8 up to the salesman to| more. closely’ comproned Yoge 1k 820 to #100, h of monarch, and in not a thi ‘ udge which is which, Often this | molecule: vater, sre sduecd a| ‘There is no question of degree in matrimony. You can bea little bit | me tn her Brooklyn childhood, ‘This | 2206 ela kind of blanket throwee Cuaenpe van be done by a glance at the pros. |a kind of blanket thro is the way we wash our clothe; pect’s apparel, A “loud” hat, an un- | wa et wae fe of them tt doubt vulston of feeling against the) tn love or a little bit fll; but you can't be a little bit married or a little | | N. B—Write it this way: Among| to the piitor of Tue Erening World those present were——; or, Those, 8 cannot break, thus protectin, Let me know the value of a halt ‘ y imitating washii at a tub, “ commonly “quiet” one or one in the|the sid ‘ *y 4 b- . f . . ymmonwealth, Many of the . “ mi) 0 y “a or one in th ne sides of @ ship that has poured To the Kastor of The Breutg World On what day did March 1%, 1890, and the question of who used the| .) 4 sary & wife Is like a Pullman porter; she can make a beautiful bluff | we cultivate the nicotics of expres-| made between the richly and the in: |as violent ae ever Ure Gogtie dase | Have you the articles appearing on fail? ad [sz has never been setued, at doing # lot of things, but is only really expert in taking the money, sion at our institution, and so we call| expensively dressed, though it is bet- y iA o break through their blanket of oll. ” ‘

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