The evening world. Newspaper, March 6, 1917, Page 14

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OS RN eS ed Pee eres eaten semen eii ieemeneetnieee —_——— ee ee ae ee ee ae ‘ —_ ad er + tea gee +e ’ ESTABLISHDD BY JOSEPH PULITZER. | Pudlished Dally Except Sunday. by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, $3 to $3 Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZPR, J. ANGUS SHAW, 1) JOSHPH PULITZ Entered at the Post-Office at New York ibacription Rates to The Hvening| For Pr irk Row, \ $3 Park Row. Becond-Clans Matter, and and the Continent end in the International “. World for the United States and Canad ‘One Year. 3 One Month. VOLUME 67......... sevceceeee NO, 20,286 | | THE NEW AMERICANISM. N PRESIDENT WILSON’S second inaugural address the people of the United States find admirable expression of the attitude and purpose with which at this crisis they face the world. | Neither the reluctance with which they have felt themselves forced closer and closer to the war, nor their ultimate determination to defend the rights they assert and the ideals of justice and humanity which they uphold, are left uncertain, Whatever happene, the disin- terested character of their intent is for all time made plain. Despite all injuries done us, “we have still been clear that we wished nothing for ourselves that we were not ready to demand for all mankind—- fair dealing, justice, the freedom to Jive and be at case against! organized wrong.” | The platform the President puts forth for the United States to stand on in its international dealings should be taken word for word! into the minds and hearts of all Americans ready to recognize that | the nation must reckon with new duties and new responsibilities i: a disordered world: | That all nations are equally interested in the peace of the world and in the political stability of free peoples, and equally responsible for their maintenances. | That the essential principle of peace is the actual equality of nations in all matters of right or privileges. | That peace cannot securely or justly rest upon an armed balance of power. | That governments derive all their powers from the consent or by the common thought, purpose, or power of the family | of nations. That the seas should be equally free and safe for the use of all people, under rules set up by common agreement and consent, and that, so far as practicable, they should be accessi- | ble to all upon equal terms. That national armaments should be limited to the nece: ties of national order and domestic safety. That the community of interest and of power upon which | peace must henceforth depend imposes upon each nation the duty of seeing to it that all influences proceeding from its own citizens meant to encourage or assist revolution in other states should be sternly and effectually suppressed and prevented. | These principles, which, as the President says, are “those of a liberated mankind,” transcend the aims of Prussianism as surely as modern civilization transcends the instincts and practices of bar-| barism. At the present moment there is nothing left on earth better worth fighting for. ' | That the President chose to speak rather of principles than of | Evening World Dai lv Magazine ‘Peace at Any Price” practical ways and means by which the country is further to “make| good its claim to a certain minimum of right and freedom of action the occasion sufficiently explains. The ways and means will be found. Nothing is more important now than that the people of the) United States should draw together in mental and spiritual uider-! standing of themselves and what it is for which they must unite. President Wilson’s second inaugural is an of the new Americanism, eS ONE OF THE TWELVE. What about formal and impressive ceremonies of repudia- ton in this city for ex-Senator James A. O'Gorman of > York? impressive exposition _ Successtul By H. J. Barrett HEN I came tn he a@ sales manager, “ said he men were paid straight salaries. T planned to change this to a drawing account and commission arrangeme! but did not act immediately. done so would have been to creath nt, To have CALL THE SIXTY-FIFTH AND LET'S SEE, ‘10. 1 svslited “to “wait unt O LESS an authority than former Attorney General Geo W. Wickersham believes the President the power t arm American merchant ships whether Congress authorizes it or not. ! “There is every precedent,” declares Mr. Wickersham, * support my opinion that the President is fully empowered to act single handed in taking whatever stons are required for national defense on land or sea until 1. iext session of Con gress, with which, of course, rests the sole right to declare war. has Nevertheless, without one unnecessary hour's delay, another Congress representing the people of the United States should so act other measures increased the mei su welcome the nt it “I began, therefore, by instaliln system of direct or mail advertini change rather than ns s with the result that they would as to convince Berlin and every other European capital that the show a good net profit over the cost President of the United States is not struggling against a formidable mob of cravens and cowards who can be counted on to thwart his efforts to arm the nation for defense, The twelve German allies in the Senate of the Sixty-fourth Con gress performed their miserable task. he mischief is done. But there is 4o reason why it'should not be undone at least to the extent of promptly demonstrating that representative government in this country does not go hopelessly to pieces under strain, Pass a new cloture rule, Call the Sixty-fifth Congress and let’s see, eee} Ghaceeetnninenes The Colonel's refusal to debate preparedness with Bryan figured handsomely yesterday in the public prints Does T. R. find that when he won't talk nowadays he gets more space? Mr _— Letters From the People Official View of Open Car Q m- | total number addressed appeared at ‘Te the Editor of The Evening World the hearing, and thero were a fow I have read with interest your edi- ther citizens who apparently lis- ‘ ke Phe Braning World upon ed with interest to the proceed ortal : | ings, but took no active part In the the operation of open cars in spring | yenrine. Very trule vow and fall, The concluding paragraph! JAMES B. WALKUR, Secretary asks this question: | “BY Te ¢ t “Before laying down hard and fast | To tue Balwr of Me Erens ! rules for the operation of ope Some thine ago a beverage ad. ap street cars in spring and fall, why red in the cars, which read: not invite @ larger part of the publlo: “Good waiters serve’ —~, Bul ail that has to ride in the cars to state | walters “are mot wecd: ie 4 ‘8 ar al 6004; Bo Insist on | getting For this very purpose the Com- » "A" saye this ts correc “BY con- mission on Wednegday, Feb. held | tends that, as it stands, the prose @ public hearing to which twenty-| xentence means that waiters, without seven complainants who have sent in| ¢xcontion, complaints about open cars to the ' ® bad, it should read: “But and insists that not all walters Public Service Commission during | aye pod," & n. K. the last two years were invited by |” J bald special letter. In addition the public ' Angeles, 528,000, was invited to attend the hearing by:| To the Hilitor of The hreniog W A Newspaper announcement, which) Let me know the population of the was given out in this office to all} largest cily in California, Is it Los Regremaralives of the press. Angeles or San Francisco? @ or two complajnants out of the 1% o » ‘ for tho purpose of aiding the sales-|to call upon the large dealers; an-! teenth century. That even gold till- mon, Weekly assaults were launched + & utility man of the plugger! ing, erroneously regarded as a mod-| Ay tt . hin a fow weeke » to call on the smaller concerns. | ern’ invention, was practised as far througt the mall, Within a & impression that It's al pack as the days of the e results began to uceruc, Then I be a $100 a week man to! Pharaohs ts proven by the discovers gan to encourage the customers te Valuable time to selling a $10 | of golden covering and ornamenta plac rs through mall, all Use your heavy artiiery on! tion on the teeth of Egyptian mun ; usiness to be credited, of [te bis fellows; pick off tho smaller | mies such busin ones with guns of less calibre—that's| ‘The first allusion to dentistry as course, to the man covering the ter-| the idea behind this eaxperim a distinct branch of surgery and as ritery in Which Mt originated, ‘The In- | "Sales have more tt & separate vocation ts found in the crease In volume was sufficient to} [took hold some two years ago. Part |pages of Herodotus. of this ts due to better ‘al condi Celsus, who practised dentistry tn of the advertising. tions, the balance to be r methods.” Greece 100 B. C., recommends that *Then | staged a two months! sales contest, the prizes to be awarded for the itest prportionate gains, The first prize was RM wateh, with an in seription within cover explaining the significance of the award. T have | Uways found that some artlele whi LAs KPACE nit ion of thin sort awakens great enthustasm, 0} reason Ix that the men feel that he ity, job they montal, potent al display tt The contest proved’ to be stimulus for greater effor showed a strong increase t wos the paye ment in which to shift payment, 1 concluded eon their sales ine Inclined to t, that the busts e with my ould actually ¢ he vic mon had und would ts. ogical mo of nore G xplained to taking pains feature this point and made it clear that the rate of commission had been sctentitically figured for each territory, centage varying in accordance w To-Day’s Anniversary the per- th BARRETT TR Bow and Ds ILLIAM W James Crockett are three ne linked tn history as the herole fenders of the Alamo, and t shared a common fate when the M jeans of Valorous de anta Ana overpowered VIS, vid de- hey ex. the nders of that adobe for | findings ostablished by exhaustive | analysis of the. field's possibilities ture, dentistry perhaps hol T were no objections alr actual salesmansh. afternoon held, and also s¢ cracked his tou elicited a great de: our product. A ent so that embodied in a sale tributed later, by two territory each Salesmanship _ T took up the hour to the subject every + Demonstration man being requested to tell ‘how he vidual information regarding selling Sort of way by attaching substitu Right now I am developing a plan salesmen shail one, the regular man | P ing Oo. New York Breaing World.) armor-clad Kn ts of E and plerce thelr ranks, At ? last, outgeneralled and outfought, the wllsh were utterly routed, Not only was Scotland saved by this battle of Bannockbura, but the ( y} ‘2 | world at large learned from it a strange lesson, | Hitherto the Man on Horseback had been thought invinetble The MONG all ancient forms of tor- sttirst place in antiquity There is evidence that even as tar back as 1200 B, C., the Egyptians and the Hindoos extracted unsound and aching teeth by the simple ex- pedient of hammering the victims Jaw with a piece of rock and that | they replaced lost teeth in a er question of We devoted 4 turday les were ries of talks, each Ip. whest nut.’ ‘This al of valuable indi stenographer was| of wood or ivory to adjacent sound the data ‘could be| teeth, fastening the artifictal and 8 bulletin to be dis-| Sound teeth together with threads wires, their method thus differin but little from those of the quacks and medicine men who travelled the country fairs of England and Amer- ica in’ the early days of the nine- cover | Vows eternal tota or a green rabbit, | truth—about ever: | miserable doubts Conyright, 1917, by The Pree Publish Bachelor Girl Reflections. By Helen Rowland _i| i Co, (The New York Brening W: id.) rt marries he makes a lot of women miserable for a | HEN a fii W little while—and one woman miserable for life. Pi The only way to cure love or the grippe 1s to bredk {t up with a powerful antidote before it gets a real hold on you, . It 1s not way the wind blows, and all a man’s protestations of devotion mean nothing if he kisses you good night with his eye on the clock and his hand on the doorknob, From the way in which a man sometimes gazes at his wife on the “morning after" a poker party and 1 abstinence you would fancy she were a pink elephant | Occasionally a man finds a woman to whom he dares to tell the real ything In the world except herself of course. One of the beauties of marriage {s that {t cures love's blindness and | enables you to love—or hate—each other with your eyes wide open, | A man's heart 1s 60 much like the weather that a woman fs filled with unless she has daily bulletins of its temperature. mountains but straws that show which! cayed teeth be stuffed with fous to extraction in orde frail or d [ead that they may not break under th |twistings of | the | furceps, which shows that in the four hundred years that had elapsed since the time of Hippocrates, dentistry had be- come a recognized part of surge’ > ks and cacklin iden? nause |The next record of the existence) vetting for the drinks and catkins) maiden? Is it because no man Baw and development of the art of den- with laughter at vulgar mark Me into r life who can com- ‘ ' tistry during the next 800 years Is and"—— ct and confidence as recorded in a of the records! “Hold on there!” said Mr. Jarr. | wet ton? left by Abu st eminent of all sq - 00 was Hk ni tenth century physicians, from which | “Whe told you boy 1 : rvlora: stag) eee it ap that artificial crowns were that? . ny iil health, prior commory attached to sound teeth. phody,” responded Mrs, Jari | claims? From this stage dentistry, always ‘put can‘ 2 Ive bowled with | «py j¢ \ > mann Pre Mivie g sy cacean ‘but can't I guess? I've b hy ary ai Is it that ambition stands between | those days, remained at a standstill dies of an afternoon and you and making some man a help. |save for ‘occasional comments hy what @ bowling alley ts like, and 1 e? Are you rejecting marriage |Sculiger, Kirchring and other anato- | know how men act and what they say wuso {t may mean privatl jmists of the sixteenth century until in| when they get together.” > aS Sree oor 8 Fauchard, who is described as! ¥ 2°? ' fy 4 re the fat ¢ dentistry, “Well, what's this tea fight you! «tas no man suffictently attracted called attention to the innumerable | want to take me to?” asked Mr Jarr you to make desire to giv evils Wrought and| “sts our new club, the Concerd- |” Re ie ea ee ea} ©! lance of Practical Ethics, Miss Iin Pare YOu Sree | 7 NG EE Pe Seana Serle y ambitions? tistry hapha inging life- |} del of Boston has gotten it up, s it, my siste: 1 z long injury and suffering to their} no one unless sie be of assured sorlti not marry because rs, that you do me, position is asked to Join, Mrs, Stry eenee seme duty aaa 3 | Fauchard it was who hit upon the at srany to get into so. | Paramount to the unselfish devotion 4 | plan of substituting porcelain for | Ve% who is so crazy to & Mo 8° | you would give to make some per- gold or ivory in the manufacture of| ciety that she'd shovel a ton of coal) unthinkin artificial teeth, his device belng,| trom the sidewalk to the cellar if she Sitonta Wasaring fone however, kept secret In 1776 Dr. 00 doing it Oreve: Mu Bots Chamand, who had. carried | 44 of any one in the 400 doing 1 Mns. Jarr nudged Mr. Jarre the new process to England, made| for a lark—Mrs, Stryver 1s giving he: min thes. thle last ren atee it_ public parlors and will serve even a grand: id . The year 1840 saw the foundaton of| juncheon—champagne, game patties, had done. \ the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, the first of all institutional dentists, while three years eariter had b formed in New York the | American Soclety of Dental Sur- geons, a naticnal organization, the first work of which was to bring about a legislative enactment pro hibiting teeth extraction by barbers Fitty Failures — Who Came Back By Albert Payson Terhune | de Bruce (or “Robert Bruce"), raised In 1306 he was crowned King right, 1017, by The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) No. 9—ROBERT BRUCE; the ‘‘Faiure’”’ Wno Freed MAN lay hidden in a deserted hut one day in the early fourteenth century, while troops of English cavalry searched the surround. ing hills for him. A reward was offered for his capture dead country, a fugitive without hope or home, hunted like a wild beast. Bruce himself realized he was a failure; that he had lost everything and that the best career he could now look forward to was the furtive, halt Crouching there among the shadows of the ruined hut, he peered ner vously about him, From a beam above his head a spider was dangling on — the end of its web. Idly the hunted man fell to watching the Insect. { affix the end of the web. But the distance seemed far too great. Six times the spider swung frantically toward the wall, only to miss its goal. . a task as hopeless as his own efforts to free Svotiand Orne from the English yoke, But, unlike himself, the spider The Lesson } would not admit failure. On the seventh attempt it Onrrrmmy Bruce—it was an age of superstition—-took the incident as an omen. Then and there he vowed to |try once more to redeem his own wrecked fortunes. Scotland and the United States almost the only opposing nations which England could never wholly conquer Under Edward I, a host of sh soldiery overran Scotiand, devag~ to check the invasion. * William Wallace, one of the world's noblest and purest patriots, stemmed the tide of English attack for a time, but soon was defeated and put te Then a Scottish noble, Lord Rober the standard of revolt against the invaders. of Scotland. scattered his patriot forces and sent him into hiding. Yet, thrilled by the omen of the spider's success, Bruce made one more effort to save his stricken cou dy followers and, step by step, besan to regaim what he had lost. Within the next few years he had won back nesrly all of Scotland from the Scotland. or alive. The fugitive was Robert Bruce—a king without @ starved life of an outlaw. The spider was trying to swing itself to the side gf the wall, there to Bruce by this time was keenly interested in the plucky insect’s task—- of the Spider. reached the wall and clung there, For centuries, off and on, Scotland and England had been at war. tating the country and easily s ing the untrained Scotch armies sent | death. Edward thrashed him tn battle after battle, drove him from his throne, try. He rallied his dispe Edward 1. died. His s ¢ Scotch at a single Pern ats marshy A Triumph “Bannockburn. of the People. § land's whole * Bruce's spi 1alled a mighty army to crush the yw. In 1314 this army met Bruge known as the Bannock Creck, or 4 a battle on which hung Scot~ rmen fought on foot. Nor could the mounted and armed knight had had ride the helpless peasant at will, | But at Bannockburn it was proven | well led and well trained infantry. In a way, thus, the battle was a triumph of Democracy as well ot Ldberty. It showed the superiority of the peasant foot-soldler against the nobleman, and it helped to blaze the trail for Equality, things all his own way. He could over- that such men had no chance against ee The Jarr Family _By Roy L. McCardell pyright, 1017, by The Drew F 9, (The New Yor Evening World.) te OU never want to go any-| “When's the shindig going to bee hy where with me," sald Mrs./gin—am I to be handed a laugh?” Jarr, “but now you have got | asked Mr, Jarr. to come.” . “Sssh!" warned Mrs. Jarr; “this ts “You never want to go anywhere|educational and uplifting. Miss with me," answered Mr, Jarr Bindcl is reading her paper on ‘Why “LT never want to go to your horrid | Women Will SOT Weds" } old Gus's saloon, or your old bow! Misa Hinde: « d and beset clubs, with fat men in their sh acled y hing of titty, roel dane sleeves smoking horrible smelling part as follow cigars, and chalk dust and nois “Why will you not wed, oh, modern id are some of my hearers re Jecting matrimony because they have occupations that render them care- free and independent? ' | “What? 1 pause fora reply, What |shall the answer be?" | A patter of gloves and murmu és verything exquisite—than did when Dr, Smerk gave a reading on ‘The Physician's Advocacy of the Simple Life’ Don't you remember the night the house was decorated so beautifully with cut flowers?—must have cost the Stryvers hundreds of tress and butchered the survivors, It comeneienth eee ae rat tis mas-| starriago is the only thing that will take a man's mind off of love and| Alaio!” became the battlecry of the | leave him the time and energy to think of something worth while. | HEH ER ete hint hand. htt n ge No love affair was ever wrocked until somebody “rocked the boat" by A TRSRNY: 8D hal Sonal A tee were brought to bay within mo, and fought to the last gasp. tion, he “Aig? telling the first le, starting the first quarrel or gotting into the first firta-| seven whales, in pursuit of a multi-| parts of the coast and began to cut up, out for tude of Sebes, ran aground 4 ballow | eer a of “How True!” “What an intelleatt fal OO ee Oe eee eran tor| dallars for those flowers alone, and| tr "kb, hep \ntorpretaten tea }tead or bone as a filling was per-| Dr. Smerk ate all the pate de fote| tremely conclusive!” arose on | fected {n 1855 by Dr, Robert Arthur] gras and real Russian caviar.’ des, ‘ |of Baltimore, white in 1884 Prof. W.|" When the Jarrs arrived upon the | yy Hut what is the answer?" a |D, Muller of Berlin, in hin al s | fr. Jarr in a whisper, “She ety of the hacteria origin of diseases of | festive scene it was surely Rorumptu- | asked questions herself!" the teeth and of the large part|ous. But carking care sat upon every “Oh, pshaw!" answered Mrs, . played by lactle acid, opened ihe show, Man and women sicomed The rx aon sh ind other old 4 | way to avenues of research, whic Hered ft marry De may ultimately lead to the total ex.|°ach other as tf all the world were | them," tinction of the dentist, but a place of doleful sighs. But if Mr, Jarr had said that | Huge School of Whales Stranded Pur — tutte aR an SO tc ae lt t fren anny Nee So bepeersnrr nat a cormaert se { | hie } t S cet raph be Rote thelr fate by time ai H, Moutton water, and were left to the receding tide, In a shi |Mahermen gathered about fr Rotting thousands of dolinrs, Only a fow of the whales are shown in the all) picture, the others belps stretched a mile or more along the , | the whales, the oil secured from them | shore.

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