The evening world. Newspaper, April 9, 1917, Page 12

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Monday, April 9, 1917 ‘Evening World Daily N\agazine of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1917, by ‘The Prem Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening Wott) | Y Son, hast thou heard “the call of the wild wedding march?” Are thine ears filled with longings for the strains of “Loken grin,” and thine eyes dazzled with visions of love-in-a-kitchenette- apartment? Dost thou catch thyself whistling softly Speeding Her Up! =z. By JH. Cassel ESTAPLISHED BY JOSEPH P Published Daily Except Sunday by the Mress Publishing Compaen: 63 Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZPR, President, 63 Park Tow, J ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 6% Park Row JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr. ereta 63 Park Row. Tntered at the Post-Oftice at New York ax Second-class Matter, Subscription to The Evening|For Englani and the Continent aa@ « ‘World for the United States All Countries [n the Internationad a Y Nos. $8 to | ‘ j " and Canada. ‘al Union. 8 One Year P $2.50] One Year... ‘ 49.79 4 * One Month. 301 One Month. aid breakfast “Love, Here Is My Heart,” and doing the ‘ OLIMAR McCormack while thou dressest for dinner? j VOLUME 57.. -NO. 20,820 Hast thou begun to hearken unto Qbbers, who tell thee’ t that two can live more cheaply than one? { LAB | Dost thou find thyself counting over thy salary, and ; OR AND CAPITAL FALL IN in thy folly adding two and two shekels so that they make FOURTEEN? Hast thou ceased to berate the barber for scentin, thy locks, and succumbed to the temptation to anoin| thy chin with Hlac water after shaving? Hast thou begun to part thine hair a new way and become exceedingy fussy concerning the shade and set of thy cravats? Dost thou linger over the glowing advertisements of instalment furnl- ture, and of electric coffee pots and new art rugs, and of tableware an@ | Mnoleums? ‘ | Hast thou blushed to find thyself beginning a business letter “Darling | trea or ordering a ton of violets when thou hadst meant to order scrap fron? ; GREEMENT between organized American labor and its employers that, on the one hand, there shall be no strikes, and on the other, no lowering of standards or conditions so long as the United States continues at war, only recognizes the plain duty of both labor and capital toward the great nation which| =~. With ite industrial forces no less than with its military forces; >” iS must this country fight. In neither is there room for traitors or deserters. With national safety in the balance, the labor union that took advantage of the general peril to advance its special demands or the employer who made similar use of the crisis to oppress his em- ployees and swell his profits would be “alike enemies of the | United States. | The Republic expects all who have prospered under its pro- —, workers and employers, to draw together now for its Dost thou sit for half an hour each morning upon the edge of thy bed holding one shoe in thy hand and gazing with mouth open at nothing at all? ~ Do policemen watch thee sharply out of the corners of their and taxi drivers shout and blaspheme, as thou walkest dreamily amongst them, escaping death by a hair's breadth at every street corner? Dost thou oversleep mornings because thou hast lain awake half the rht dreaming of the price of porch hammocks and lawn-mowers and pink | breakfast caps? ot! H Dost thou pause before milliners’ windows and drapers’ shops to spe late on the cost of feminine hats and hosiery? Dost thou find thyself forgetting to eat thy luncheon, leaving thy din- ner untasted, wearing odd gloves and reading thy newspaper upside down? Hast thou decided to give up cigars and wine, and to confine all thy Joy to a pipe and a mug of ale? Dost thou WORRY over the price of potatoes? Canst thou think of RICE without a shudder? ‘Then I charge thee flee from temptation while the flee lug is yet good! For by these signs thou art stricken with the spring marrying fevert Yea, thou art the spring lamb prepared for the shearing! ‘And if thou are not wiser than the fox, and more +rtful than the ser- pent, behold, thou shalt be “in the matrimonial trenches before Christmas!” lah. y —_—_—--————_ Young Ouba leading the Latin republics tmto line does oredit to her guardian and sponsor. | THE HOME GARDEN MOVEMENT. HETHER it proves a war of months or a war of years, tle people of the United States are going to emerge from it* * with new habits of thrift, resourcefulness and self-control. | Right at the start, for instance, we are getting straight down to| practical ways and means of tackling the food problem. | Famine and want in Europe convince us « nation at war cannot begin too early to conserve and multiply its food resources: Without wasting a week we can set to work. The home vegetable garden movement promises one of the greatest benefits and safeguards the American people have ever had. i chance to work out for themselves. It will help to preserve them | P strong and invimeible through war. It will remain in peace to protect them from food gamblers and profiteers. onli / Successful Salesm J. Barrett Knowing Your Merchandise. ERYTHING © clse being higher than Competitors’, but whiebs oH RY THING h ause of thelr superior accuracy equal, the salesman WhO ind reduced up-keep cost, were @ knows his merchandise poS-| hetter investment. By starting in at once to demonstrate for himself and his neighbors how much food he can raise in his own garden or back yard, the American houscholder can make a contribution of in- | sesses an immense advantage over A wad the price!’ protested the re- , tailer, ‘I can't see it.’ his competitor who relies only upon | tale’: 8 + r. Haskell,’ countered the sak sheer salesmanship,” sald a particl-/| man) impressively, ‘a few mont! larly successful one, “And it’s sur-/ ago I made @ trip’ through our fa prising how often you find @ sal Among other things they man who has never been in the fac-| wed me a few stones, just plain, calculable value te national force and endurance. Believing this, The Evening World offers expert advice and help to every one who has a plot of ground that he is willing to plant and cate for. Oo-operating with The Evening World, Chairman Ward of the Board of Park Commissioners will have a model garden plot : only La “When they asked Wendell Ph » charts on our scales, or the secret of his marvellous 1 Uis, Mr. Haskell, other s for the secret of his m Sas “pet use| printed charts, We cling to tery of oratory, he replied: ‘¢ lithography because It is the only ’ chief thing I alm at is to master my) method by which accuracy cay be as- tory. planted in Union Square, Manhattan, where home gardeners can como ene saientneate peateeeeeteprarseneenenenenseteanenaaneties —_—____—_— subject.’ His oratory, it appears, / sured. to study proper methods of raising vegetables on « small scale. In ’ Seer eke Sone? a a ———— was but the spontancous expression ineg cust ust” the ‘muperitenaenm the columns of this newspaper will be found practical directions,| Y d M h sy. D avec [ ‘ h US pdaValasee saul tects Coats lodge sodas salah Whe age aryregen eee] esterday s other to To-Day's Daughter _ | irate pits, soon sit tis Lites adapt mall —— ‘anship. ‘The chief thing to| sa i panes ely Ba bi thor he ta = . = seul my By Marguerite Mooers Marshall lite tac d don'e wank oulta play| The woman’ who never GRhis, who| tim atin to master ite Tae Bie Malar Mile | all. jlife that I don't want you to play | ma 0 never, §, whol dive; to know i from the ray ina nine thousand seven leaves a | Copyright, 1917, ty The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World.) Lae real taihae, ue dances A ai lor ms Wee Wictalty, tam terribly’ bad trey tind eas perros, WP. Se rele lh piety ie Oe ee she so far forgot all ladylike principles | tight, fight, fight! You cannot wallow | influence, She waters and cultivates! “The other day, while waiting my interest of fecuracy, And you say ‘to put into the nation’s fighting power. ( NO. For those whe do not fight now but who may have to latet, there|[~\EAR ttle Daughter: 1 nave) Senicae Fomnta eee enim, (AB Be | Te ta tiee? OF Amlable, {adolent Ron- | oe Mite Prusmaniam. Bvery daugh- | Nyt Ate voncern's salesman try-| produces PS® OF GUE ., u t domestic ssianis: avery h- d a scale concern’s salesma y- | produc po agar Rage ai, nerve-steadying interest than the care of a been rereading “ ey oval bey 9 (foot slipped and he fell, strik- A great woman pianist, a woman |ter who remains unmarried because peetto interest him in his product, Peron minutes. later that. sien . you wrote me, in wi you ad against a piece of furni-|who had reached the pinnacle of her|S!* has & father as unreasonable 4s| Hig company, It seemed, turned out) had closed Haskell for three scales evden. young and old it provides ideal spring occupation for ppoke of your de- | ture. He firmly believed that he had) chosen profession, once told me Mrs. Browning's is giving ald and) goalies the original cost of which was! You sce, he knew his three ae been hit by his sister's impromptul firmly: sire to enlist in] missile—which actually didn't touch| succeed must. be some sort of war|him—and he regarded her with a new | with service, J am so|hd strange respect for days afthr-| me. 1 glad that you are| V2"d a patriot instead “a shall not go inta the reasons why, The woman who wants to|comfort to injustice, encouraging Kelfish.”” “Te agres | other fathers to deprive their daugn- er, But don't misunderstand | ters of @ place in the sun. | in not advising you to be a|., Every wife who is non-resistent to Ditonto treat with Mehreehiichieit | te unfair demands her husband may every hapless little Belgium you en- le helping him to be a little the present national crisis, you|counter, Neither am I counselling & cater who will thwart and Miliukoff Russia’s Man of the Hour edd hours. It is the purest kind of pleasure. At this moment it is, ve sane, practical response to national need. Every American who owns cultivable land, rents such land or | ‘ane right to the use of such land should enlist at once in the home 5 difficult to say at this time who | Railroad to a penal camp for political gerden movement. ; of @ pacifist.| must believ 5 a . vh © that war is the’ only| you to be a rude person, a boor, But ne cna ae P wie ne flue | malcontents There are too] Way for America. President Wileon.|) think you, any woman, has ‘the | Wil try to bully his employees: Wil PADRE AB WG BER Las ay | After a time he was released, but + many pacifist |{2 bis last message to Congress, has | right to be ‘selfish in | Even the business woman who does figure in the Russian revolution, | nig spirit was not broken and he was the sense of | not don 1 or ¢ © Menest flabe tor | fot don, tn armor of manner when yur many of those eaties with con- | banished from the country, “He took t he deems most laugh pon her time a , | ditions in the land of the Czurs in-|refuge in the United States and bes bh lead ~ Bs footer teat Log coord of his; read | desirable AMAURH A ROH Sed SUE oe Stree cline to the belief that history will | (ime @ member of the many m over. ture generations! ‘The wonderful endurance, the pas-|haunt offices, adds to the intolerahle | accord the greater glory to Prof. Paul | tine imaking 5 vena of boya nd girls will | are fire-eating ye and girls earn it and] sive strength, of wo De 8 ary y ane BDOAK it from tha plattcrm. evan sive strength, of women has been| assurance f that army ‘and thus |x. sijukoft, who was made Foreign | Governme given an explanation nobler and = in the ™ making a fair a wome! convincing than any one else can|the thing in Hfe Mo better man than Herbert ©. Hoover, formerty in adkune ue eae oad eel ete @m food supply and food prices. Mr. Hoover has seen what a people can suffer when ite food distributing system has Bu ¢ of the United erumpie’ ilitarists. j ; But the reaso ake life harder for other busy per- 7” One reason for "onie condition, 1 Senin Wahetere somous apostrophe Tee nave Nad be une fe ERA RE ms omer Dus P&F= | Minister in the new Government During the Russian revolt of 3 Sn 4 4 ru hrough| the past centuries is because the Lubby disposition {s as unhealth: tukoff is a college professor. He |(@elivered 4 series of lectures which suppose, is the difference in the edu-/a hundred thousand schoolrooms. DID endure it—instead of assuming Wind muscles D rh. Much b he mss peers . Sb ele Ne of his- | Lave Since been brought out in beok SIGNS IN GER cation of boys and girl, We call the| It 1s tn your personal relation to. the offensive love from MOTHE DOSEN DIR CAF ROE O88 | form, NY. iitle boy @ aowadé who will not Use tory at the University of Moscow. | Miliukoff was a thorough democrat, war ——— a ~ “1/ While engaged in that ca y he| With socialistic tenden when hi erous books and magazine | VS #8aln permitted to return tussia, He soon became the jeader artic dling with Russian history, |of the Conatitutio unimated by a democratic and liberal can one Pine! oamecratie spirit which soon brought down upon a. dust. ton. yeate ako, Lane | dls head the wrath of the police elected to the present Dum. “Ae re- his fists to protect his rights. T* German Emperor feels the moment has come to promise the| On ice ctr tant, the little girl German people an even earlier carrying out of electoral re-|!8 faithfully tnoulcated with the forms which shall give them more voice in the Government, |*t"tne that #he must “be iadylike,” whatever the provocation, Let dos} Copyright, 1917, ty The Prew Publishing Ce, | wrote | The Jarr, Family “By Roy L. McCardell The latest Imperial order leaves it to Chancellor von Bethmann-| ana little boys delight to bark and (The New York Evening World.) NneR AES for it" replied Mr, Jarr.|food supplies with bread, meat and| He took refuge in Bulgaria, where | itor of the Reich, the great Mberal Hollweg to see that “by the right means and at the right time” the| bite; sue must amile and purr, Even|¢¢7'M sure I'm as patriotic as any-| 9 ple Gama soldiers will have tofother cards, must stand in line In|he was engaged in organising the] newspaper of Russia, and as an ore 4 ° ht on grape juice and near-beer, | fr¢ bres for hours and | Governme! nivers Sofla. On | ator pa demands of the hour are fulfilled and German political life “shaped 18 some other eBid tenses Ber oF) body,” said Mrs. Jarr, looking UP! tne canteen ts ca n a i one peti o i rd he st sy ar Jena alts [is return to Hussia he again’ em- [ten sete idea en ft ey : ot be the re- trom the morning” newapaper| om, mith @ Shollahed in the army, | hours, end perhaps when Mey set %9 | nd on a career of libe Jalon‘ a powerrut ieaprees to ke r 0 : ‘i burts ber, she may not & paper | scodehaplg A ryderrety ‘ fe aa barked on @ career of liberal propa-!sion upon the minds of ‘ ry oom f t the free and joyful co-operation of all the mem-| aressor of her own wrongs with @ sigh, “but I'm just as well oe : MEASPs ORE AMER BEE ais mater His sunny ls eons and | ganda and gained such disfavor in| men, Prot Millukofe has alwawe aie: bers of our people, Perhaps this instruction in non-re-| Pleased you are too old to be taken} Ty rinn on the porter, and ee [208 Bae age AB IBS TROY OF | eo ent Hacer Ove the MURIAE ITinecee in ie eae ene ‘ is desirable and necessary | into the army and that Willie 4 OD RAP RARE BIN OGREOT | OO cree Secs e sie ger dlgzinaidlnieiipsia aise: Reseach neh ROUUETY A day or two ago, however, those powerful “members of the Ger-| ****2°° 7 ane our te 18) told me that his cousin's own colonel] “Dear me! Why it's like a success- a . i ; But I once knew @ little girl whose | too young!” man people” whose feelings are voiced by the great Socialist orgau,| brother was 4 bad-tempered bully.| “Me too old?” cried Mr. Jarr. “Why, Vorwaerts, were declaring that Germany should end the war imme-|2"°-**” when be was tormenting ber! rm just in my prime. I'll go where diately its enemies make it clear that their designs contemplate auty calls me!” neither conquest nor annexation. | | Vell, go down to your office, there’s where duty 1s calli just now,” Signs multiply to show the Kaiser is not going to get “free and, ryerarierant had him in the guardhouse—or rather | ful play!” erled Mrs, Jarr, “I can The perfection of art is to conceal art.—Quintittian a working prisoner in camp, because | understand people standing in Bne . he found six bottles of warm beer| for hours to see the opera, but to do hidden tn his pup tent.” it to get something to eat nrust be dreadfully trying. Can't they tele-| | phone to the grocer and butcher and “And served him right,” said Mrs, To-Day's Anniversary the|Jarr. “The idea of putting beer in replied Mrs. Jarr. “And, just is always thought bad luck in| back for anything forgotten means ; ' 5 i 1 Ff a tases an innoen " say they have their bread or meat ts ” | BRHAPS the most imposing Of | same, 1 geo that only me nd tent with an Innocent puppy at | seak | that the perso joytul co-operation from a united German people merely by reform all peace conferences—because| tnirty-five will be Taken inte the| Mr. Jarr sighed, but didn’t attempt |C@fds and to send the things| rehearsals of a new play to speak | corns ‘lines In hie pares, ee ane ing the Prussian election laws. Thought has begun to stir in man: of its great simplicity—was that]. iyo to explain. What's the use? 9. D the last few words—the “tag” 88 ‘If, during the first performance of held fifty-two years ago lo-day, April y “They telephone all they want | it !s catled—before the opening night.) a play, the curtain should rise and parte y: As thought takes courage, Prussianism falls back’ y, 1863, at Appomattox Court House, f I'm thirty-five, how old are you "I wonder if we'll have bread cards, |44 said Mr. Jarr, “but it will do no | He who has the tag to s1 substi | a view of vanishing a step by step and peace moves forw: Virginia, On that duy--which was| “A woman is as old as she makey up and meat cards and potato cards, like | goog @ food cards must be pre- | tutes for it some meaningless phrase ‘t ix a bad omen and the | Paim Sunday—there met in a# tiny, mind to be,” answered Mra. Jarr. the papers say they have in Germany |<, rau cna ie Chava we 4 not succeed, according to an y poorly-furniahed room the resi! “She's ag old as she makes up her | 4nd maybe will have to have In Eng Aented In person. It in the servants | IE he spite tt SpAenorr pe The bel ; \ dence of Wilmer McLean, in the Vir- be a Gs x, i andak Sit : sd Pra or housewives who have to stand in ts of the play would be considered ne belief, which fs not confine § Letters F rom th e P eop le ginia village, the leuders who had | face to be, 1 should say,” retorte: . ries Mrs, Jurr went on, “I'm sure) jing with tt med | the stage, that the passing of pg . rriblo Civil War of the|Jarr. “Be careful what you sa; if we had cards now tt could hardly h , : pengona on & staircase is a ay Wives of Aliens. ances to Ce rought the terri y Do you think anybody will be at It is considered a fatal thing, too, | o¢ “a e aro sign mans y oi 4 conclusion, and io no ws ye oan orse, the gs to eat| of “dead bad luck," preva Pa i go that they wil! pot | States to a conclusion, and who Now| precious. 2f 1 am too old to en be any w way things to eat/to keep a servant girl if that’s the|to open an umbrella on the stage at| out the acting Profession gonnas be put under restrai: Kindly advise me as to the stand-|otter provocations Umeee they i Aerenee the terms of #Ur-/ the frst Mne defense, the 8. P, ©. p would not prevent you from being a and wear are getting dearer all the] easeo a 1 Mrs, Jarr. “Do you|the first performance, Indeed there and among chorus girls particularly, - me, Do you know what I pald for/think our Gertrude would do that?|are scores of actory who firmly be- es Sates. ca ing of an American woman, daughter Ten Conte, he white-hiuired, elegant Lae, one A of an Amerioan citizen, married to an | 7 the Péitor of The Evening World of the greatest soldiers of all me, | @ on the score of tender | tose pork tenderloins? Not unless the bread card line was In| lieve that to open their umbrella A BITTER FATE. . alien German, tn case it should de-| C&D you tell me the value a | Was, cast ofoh, tae role of the van- | Mr. Jarr didn't know. His reply | front of the fire house, where Claude, | within the Walls of a theatre even for NUMBER of local Grand A velop that Germans are interned, half-penny dated rr Lo ae fon ja} ery bus w Ik | not thirty,” said Mre, Ja was that it wasn't the me, and | the fireman, who is her beau, is sta- | the purpose of drying it is certain to A veterans were having gba How would it affect her? J. H. G, | 108,826,300, Eetimate by Cenens Au-, 4! Grant, 4 little tooping, |“and you know it! As for being a/ bread and potato carda that made| toned. Or unless the bread or meat! pring disinissal | on, and were entertain r It is not the present purpose of the Jan, 1, JShabby man, quiet to the point of | vivandiere, who wants to be a vivan- | things dearer im war countries, They | card line py 4 through @ moving| It is believed to be unlucky to| » members from a neight 4 % Government to intern enemy aliens | 7 the Editor of The Evening World Jwhyness. In that little room, with | 1 saw a moving picture of| were only means to conserve the sup ure theatre whistle In a dressing-room—for the | State, Some of the visiting phy) nd ie who give no cause for such action. | What is the population of the Ur ted | th Bunday auillnens broken Saly by the vivandiere, in ‘Under| ply and keep the rich from getting| ‘Well, you'll have to do it, then; | person who chances to be nearest the| protested against certain pr hee ‘ ioe. Siiareey Sennen) Han igeued 10> |e 1610 Jand the whispere of thelr slat of- 8," and all the soldiere were| tho best of everything—and the most, | ll wives will have to attend to the; door when the crime is cammitted will | legislation by the State pe 3 structions bidding Germans to “keep 1% Ma * were Virtually re. [in love with her. But I think that} “In fact, it is sald that things to| food cards,” said Mr. Jarr receive ‘his dismissal before he is| One of the speakera became =a a thelr mouth shut and mind thelr | ny the paitoe of The Evening World in terma of peace, deniand. | was because she carried a little cask | eat, things that are to be obtained at | “How about the husbands?” asked | Ir also is considered unlucky to drop | Rement in bis remarks and pat hy business.” An American born woman| Please decide bet between two of iim, Shiy thelr parole of honor from full of brandy strapped to her waiat.| all, are not much dearer in war | Mra, Jarr a comb in the theatre. Another bad | cenaauaticn #0 despalringly thet am married to 8 German Is n aubject of |Your readers. Watch part cf tie pop: | Kiespanding wndly. to a salute, Lee | Some amen will do anything for}eduntries than here" Mr. Jarre ex Oh," was tho reply, “they'll be too amen is the spilling of wine or sarneet auditor, Overwheuand Ep tie 7 ° EK B, rode back to his victorious army, “They need not join tae Gaited | system m ehas dose Who get (heilr|noeuvre known as @ retreat, A? [Ne or tne the afawe aud tian Sale aint D ven Peta e teen. that we ‘ ‘ ,

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