The evening world. Newspaper, October 3, 1917, Page 14

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Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland om. toe Ge ee Bee Het Bem Heer [ ~~ ), ‘Tericn of on Husband Por, vertiy, verily, 1 ony wate thee the Tewion le simp ue (Ade Lim and compared voice DIM the Mus ls on threren! bole | tebeld © married man when be entereth bie os 0000 Coe Tour’, ss dt One Month . ure: Shes eA Sete om 1 VOLUME » 4 ow wweneer AT OF COMURAEE OF ALE 4 eee meekly, wth bumble confers ov ent i th o barrage of rapie Gy Me forestalieth bie wife's attack ad slienceth the big @une of her eccusstions, crying “Now, why on earth te this bal) Mebt left bere the electric w+ i u rr “Well, why the deuce bath NOT the bal! lamp bees lighied! Dor ow want me to commit suicide by falling over my own furniture? Ge tw! a | a ee tee And WHAT do | emell bare aguinet ber. Bho surrendereth and serveth bie dinner without murmuring { He bath polsoned the wellepring of ber contumely—and there is nv Ggbt left in her. Behold, \ikewtee, sccomplished ie an Husband tm the art of Camouflage Yea, « seasoned pollu ts unto bim as a novice unte « master. For s woman may camouflage hie very breath with mints and with eloves, snd his defections with the “Alas, | must work late at the office tonight that my Beloved may have « cow fall hat and @ cloak of seal fur!” ' “Nay, Sweetest, 1 could not get here sooner, for I was stalled im the , #ubway and TOO frugal to hire « taxicab!” Yea, whatsoever fault or folly he committeth, from wearing white spate unto burgiing & bank, he committeth it “for love of a woman” and tm the spirit of “ee.t-sacrifice.” Yet, when his wife masseth her gune for the Fall Drive, saying: “Now bring forth thy shekels! For th!« |» the appointed hour when I must have some CLOTHES!” He torpedoeth hopes, crying: “What! Great Scott! Knowest thou not thet I have just | all my moneys {nto Liberty Bonds, Woman?’ Or, peradventure, he camouflageth her, saying: “Go to, Beloved! Wherefore dost thou desire another frock. wae thou lookeet so ravishing in THIS one?” Verily, verily, the Kaiser hath nothing op HIM! For, whensoever he findeth himself winning, he {6 a Divtutur and a Impertalist: but when he findeth himself in backwater he is filled with Promises and Peace Offerings. Therefore, I charge thee, my Daughter, when thou weddest dream not of a Domestic Democracy and disarmament, For married life is one of these three: A State of War. an Autocracy or an Armed Neutrality. And there ts NO Perpetual Peace IN it! Selah. TAS PREM PUBLISULNG CO,, Ralph Pulitan, Provident, se datmartived before me thie iat day uf ‘eiover, IIT, eal.) EDMUND D, TITUS, Notary Vabllc Kings County No, 168, Rag. 0040, <Cartihease fied la X, ¥, O. Oo, Ne 10m, Meg, Hii4, (My commission expires Marck 90, 1918) « is 5 AS MILLIONS SEE IT. | eco OFFICIALS tell us that the order of the Fuel Admin- istration which limite the profits of retail coal dealers is expected to cause @ drop of fifty cents @ ton in the price of, ‘ituminous coal in this city and from fifteen to twenty cents per ton, in the cost of anthracite grades. | Once jet New Yorkers see thie expectation realized and it will ‘wean a substantial increase of confidence in the power of the Govern- went to supply the sort of protection upon which the public has eon | zl % invite? of late to count. | The average small consumer is awaiting demonstrations of that power that come right down to his humble, but to him important, “Why It Js Easier to Succeed | Than to Fail _ Honesty and Courage Really Pay Big Dividends By Nixola Greeley-Smith Copyright, 1917, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World, SCESS is easier than failure,” trom the well-born, are vho has succeeded.| “Some men tour imaginary Alps S wayas ie NAR ie sentence | “!! their lives and die tn the foothitia Taking this life-giving , {cursing difficulties that do not exist. . as his title an¢| Over-educated men and women be- He hears the price of wheat has been fixed. Yet ho pays no less for bread nor gets pe ad loaf for his money. . He reads that eteef prices have been cut. Steel has never been a} —_——— } lling item in his needs, | ee ee j we Sahieaad that the on of coal at the mine has been| ForWhom theArmy C amps reduced. Can he buy coal at the mine? | Were Named Cc Jarr Family Roy L. McCardell —— oe NST HMR TAMS TEST SS ORS AP ESHEETS REE HS Ee ' } 9 | P! i 1 The B But show him—with winter coming on—an actual decrease of! even fifteen or twenty cents in the price he pays for the ton of stove | Coporight, 1917, by the Wresa Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). i i t W. | come as conceited as the coal which it now costs him $8.75 to have dumped in his coal bin. By James C. Young ‘“ HATS the matter with you make you taunt even to be told about, Pest |B like vary. rok ana besstae teiaeaee Guarantee him that there will be nono of thwse recurrent arbi-| Ooprright, 1017, ty the Frese Publishing Co, (The New York Ereuing Work now!" asked Mra, Jarr,| Yet. Able beca a one ie Jed the |{2n# of life, ‘They claim a superior- . ; f ' | ; y 4 | as coming from the | dnd the defermined could endure fife Aue Jobe | ye tey cannot Prove, and rewent ie trary and excessive boostings of coal prices from which he has suffered| America's former National Guard urd her new National Army are being | |. 4. ¢ Atchison Globe| when people of less’ learning run fte t ts when h ded coal trained in thirty-two camps that dear the names of men who Acid high | STOCer's she was aware of s hand-| icon minutes of, much less many ter. and made 1t| away from them in the practical alg season after season at moments when he necded coal most. . . | | some town car stopping by the curb] rible, endless drudging days and ' ‘ rf , fairs of life, Then you will have taken a long step toward convincing him that rank in the country's Matory, This series of articles will endeavor to tell| sng a fair hand beckoning to her.| "4s, week in and week out, for known wherever) “Success in life is easier than fali- | what these men did to merit such honors. The fair hand appertained te Mrs. ithe aod maenths, humor and wis-| ure; there ts more morality and use- + dari tat \e pe co ‘Oh, don't talk to me like that! | ful the interests the Government is considering are indced his interests. 7—JOHN SEVIER State, in order that "they might aid | (Clara Mudridge-Smith, Thav'’s the way my husband talks, [ ee Bee tind ‘nuccens ‘a the gauge of respect: : lp HD was the can who almost) tole Tut ee ee rtiee et et peheae| “Ob, T'fa in auch trouble,” moaned} want to do something I want to be, Qig shed a ittto| Dility. It ts every man's natural duty Bir Saks wae Assur yc 0 limou-] Cf real service to ube world in these to make a success of his lif 1 added another State to the}of the war. Such was American] the fair young matron In the lin Moran oe wineaa! Fl hil fo, ani AIR-RAID REPRISALS. FH. ites asxee” state tthe | tat ata ce fae ean agin ine Uinem Lapa On veto ot it | Sutin, queens of Rp tte ant Tho North Carolinans welcomed! “1 might know you hadn't stopped| the implements?” suggested Mra, |) #°PhY Which will give hope and A man may do very well who does could not have remained, despite all provocation, free of any- thing remotely resembling Germany’s murderous warfare against non-combatants, it must nevertheless be recognized that the Teuton barbarians have carried systematic murder by air raids to:a point where only repri in kind offer any hope of checking it. ‘ Monday night German bomb droppers, flying over London, Reinet et as it may seem that the record of the Allies for five years in|tho colonists, and iycorporated what pre Jari courage to all who read tt. not forever strive; not a great deal maintaining an in-|is now the Btato of Tennessee with |' take me joy riding!” scoffed Mra | itr, dnd she pointed to the costly, of genius is necessary to meet tho wnitting bag in thi » z t with himseit|@pekesman and the leader for|day to Mrs. Dinkston—who was . "Oh, uniting ie -, Sucsdrum, and I every page of Mr. Howe's book. It is bibtteg thet Should not be; the rules ee tt | Watauga in all of its undertakings. |Gratch, you know—that nobody ever! ave po patience to learn. I want to|® BOOK of bellef in lita and people/ Nh ate naked to obey were made fur at the head of {t.) He organized a strong body of militia! came to see me or desired to seo me|do some real work, no matter how | 4nd in the old, simple wisdom of the) ft, oe the, Wer ner than neg- Thin Government and held buck the Indian tribes that | C0 i ee anted to give me| PUmble. 1 want tobe of help.” leathers. Tt 1s impatient with the| °s,0,,tem,, WEY does S ford man extended tn 8) Seacoast settlements while they ware] thelr confidence, and always Yery | at homer ae your husband tinge: | modern Philosophies which seek to/ciple: it is really profit. Remember rough way over a krips with Engiand. ‘This was| qisthal canfidence. Well, what is It?” | said Mrs, Jar. “But if you want to|@ynamite the Rock of Ages and pro-|0f ® Sood act first that it pays; then large area, a ood ¥ work, against numberiess odds)" asty pusband won't let me be a Red | helD su vanity. brought the total of dead and maimed by air raids on that city up to Pare Of wee Ml aiblo. difficulties. “Tho, tale gust | Cross nurse, he won't let me go| tie war In increased expense, come) mostly lies, It teaches that life, as] | “Every writer and speaker fre- 51 killed and 248 injured since Sept. 24. Th new ihe Btate 'o y bit! He always| ‘ ertrude go, and | 4+ 4s, is good; that laws and conven-| quently makes this statement: “We jured since Sept. 24. @ same day another Ger- Tonnesseo. The io | hen|#r@ confronted with great problema,’ re + and helped to win the battle! thwarts my every ambition!" whim-| can cook, you used to before you tions are necessary, and that when | Ty sir tpi nore Sreat pi snr country was oa eo of Kings Mountain in 1100 against pered the lady in the lmousine, married so well, At least you cooked | society punishes rebels against Jt8! problems in the fi pF cond adh ve e pti hat Was cisive en on the western war front, killing three British nurses and several re oy diraeeeraeee jayoment, and one of the, turning| ‘He doesn't thwart your ambition| { code It 1s like @ mother disciplining | have been worked out, a fi of Benjamin Franklin, ae po! , " ’ 2 > ch} o tidren, 0 say life is He wounded soldiers. oe aden In Frente: ave brilliant POmts of the war to have nice clothes, and too much| “Phe more reason I won't do it| UAruly ch’ derstandabie! Bos sD: dependent Govern. |thelr own dominion. Sevier was the|Jarr. “I was Just saying the otber extra large and over-flowered ailk| The heart of America beats on| requirements of life. Nothing 43 pron body who feels the burden claim that the eternal verities are|D@ Proud of tt if you cannot avoid Sevier. He kept the Ifdians| abroad to do you can do her work for me. You, man airman dropped bombs on two hospitals behind the Britiah lines rat place, for yourself, apd over an oll sto pi » and they oo!" H 1) r. Howe exclaim: No nation can be expected tb permit the murder of women, mbit teeeasteties ae nis, adroinistrative | 16 od jer Was as much a diplomat a8} Jewelry and @ fine town car and the remarked the opulent young} I do not belteve everything that/"I may not like it but I warrior. Around the coun- serait matron, “Domestic _ aclenc | pnderstand sostiiest complexion that money cag science was believes, but I know that|!t. If I make the best dren and the helpless wounded to go on indefinitely without trying Power’ On Aug. ba etabaa i a Sa TNS ereeiibae ck the elite tan buy,” declared Mrs, Jarr. lature UE 2 thtond: te Col hestalarndaneres beings will get more| "its: If! do not Tamm fool, ; Z ) jovernor, and| abo p re of ite : omehing, 0 your work the best every possible means calculated to terrorize the murderers, The erin wana te ‘until, 1789, {Ad urged: p They heard, aud] “But [want to be @ nurse, and he| “Work in an.ammunition factory,| comfort from his gods than mine, and @ best way’ you \t the ; ; yy ‘ can and be modest, patient ; . “i . many paid heed. He negopmted| won't let me, Saya he ia old and) then," sdggeated Mrs, : lah French decided earlier. And in reprisal for recent German raids on| when the Franklinites were compelled | treatiog PS OS: AU, SEAR 8 AR G18 rfl uae ¢ is}and b ; fos which served better than vie- | jy ‘And maybe get blown up and dis.| thet men And women who fallow ee eae saa ene Dunkirk and other towns in France; French airmen this week bombed t® b&w before the power of North ize © y 4 in the fleld, f cas | figured, and “get. my hands “ai}| ules of success, who practise hon- | Prise coming to you will arrive, Carolina troops, Their territory had| After the Revolution differences “Then nurse bin," advised Mrs.) course?” asked the young matron, |esty, industry and courtesy, will at Stuttgart, Treves, Coblenz and Frankfort. The British public is now, eae : State, and . arose between the Watauga settle-|Jarr. “You'll be # nurse, and be will i Rea C; ee ‘ . 3 . belonged to the latte AO | mont and the State of North Carolina! he satisfied.” EE yoy ting b least isosey 88 pee Fee oe “Hospital Slackers” more and more, loudly calling for reprisals. It seems not unlikely | Sevier was seized as leader of the | Bo its citlaens broke away, estab.| «1, there anything romantic in| UP at that work, my led ene Led xe eh nother almost Quickly C d i ; } sp he obtained bis! lished the Stato of Franklin, anc Jace, 4 ti “In one form and anoth : that British scruple may yield to the demand for vengeance, cemtonista, Later he 0) eee ee ee overnan aith what] thact” asked Mra, Mudridge-Smith,| yer tser tan ep? & favorite targer| “Tn o |Fie A i dom, became the first Governor of After all, would Americans feel or act differently? Eases HT eee ae kay Deliberately repeated attacks upon defenceless non-combatants other one man to spread civilization tho first State gov for German airmen, And I am afraid| every writing man has sald an honest seen. When] "staying home and nursing an old| a nurse's work is rather hard on the n cannot accumulate money,” Mr, ed he headed | husband inatead of doing one's bit| hands, and hard on the body and on|™®*! ults already hy ne breach had be TORIBS of how to outwi @ . rves, “The simple truth it impos- 1 belli i nh the wilderness, nee and waa twice re ‘ennes~| somewhere in France?” Mus Sven socauetiaibvek ne ting bagel eae may more easily be ac- tors who report sick in order to ai igerent nation toa pee of savagery where massacre as a tprurs Se erie G4 the cate Sevier was essentially a pioneer.| “Do your bit by your own fireside,” | wronging the brave and noble women le crmntea with honetsy than without loaf in hospitals are among the retaliatory measure is recognized as necessary. Is gentus ded in the ca of « 7 . Ls 0 C1 A tonment for Natlonal Guard troops) it's ginl rN ao “4 cae oe replied Mra, Jarr, You might not} who have earnestly and laboriously It is hard to see wounded soldiers murdered on their cots, or little, trom that State, North Carolina and|to grapple with tho mon and things , > either. Have you trained ‘ . " bears the name of this|that grew in the wild. He founded | romantic e children blown to pieces as they come from their lessons, without Se nc Sovier came of | the state of Tennessee and opened al for nursing, have you had any ex-| Preparing for those guilty of such crimes the only punist ee oldest traditions of the medical branches of all armies, A fourteenth century collection of anecdotes shows that the malingerer was known in those days and Cardinal de Bari, 4 teadily a man prac- ’ wanael i : taken up that, hard, Nl-rewarded, | !ti the more # find nursing wounded soldiers very Te ian ibiy jaetabaee wore tises politeness, fairness, industry “You talk just lke my husband. I! ang temperance the more his store might have known you wouldn't ad-| ("ses and the greater his oppor- | hment bere| Fone strain, and the family name| Wey, (rows tho vast stretch of | perience vise me eo neyond — tl Cra : }o* g | . Long experi+ + who barians can understand originally was Xavier, But usage an- When ‘he crossed the ridge he tand "P) DUET Souls learA” Way 180) ‘ eae vou really ab fmasen it | ihn roeertam that the beat ell vegans ae act found its i sh ’ t ny. ‘ou to * | ens resources were being exhau; Sea | glic: to the present form, He| beyond was unknown, reply. "I am #0 eage: if you are going to stick, I kno : sted by L etters F th 2 van 1 aay ‘| Sevier met hie end, rich in years and] you started,” said Mrs. Jarr, “Before| could be better spared—for your hus- | cess, distinction and usefulness is to | # © investigate. ‘This rom e eop he Sept. 8, 1745, and at an early age|ponors. He was n trachug 1a’ hea\a Baal band hire @ nurse to take exceed the average in politencss,)™&M, Petrillo by name, who was Need of Fire Protection tm) enforcement of that law. Wi turned his face westward. Young! , boundary when d me to bins, | YOU Could be @ reat Qurse you would) ore oP hie." | romptness, reliability, industry and|S0™mthing of a humorist, dressed him. , Charen Wooden DULG ea ao ule, the) Sevier bad @ share in wars with th attended by only a few woldiers and(bave to scrub floors, and make beda| 1) °1 NM a tee nim have a | rome Ta tect that | elt, In the robes of @ physician and {To the Editor of The Es Ww. for thi . s thought unfit Indians and do a lot more things that might ro temperance, It is @ great fact that] assembled all the patients for an ex. ‘the Editor wening World: e assemblage of people to wit-| Indians before he was out of his nurse, some woman who-might make | . P book of morals; a| amination of their wounds, Th, In passing @ wooden building con-| "4 a picture show, there seems to! tecns and gained a commission as| —___--——- an impresaion on him? Why be might | Should be in every Ae en ho demned by the Bullding Department be no objection to Its use as a church, | Captain in the Virginia Line. | = A — die while | was away and leave the| great fact has been demonstrated, prover ae gate ey rly but one pome months ago as unfit for housing | tres, (MUED NO alterations. ‘were | Croaaing (ho Alleghanies Into what | Anniversary bold thing all bie, money” “Parents are forever telling ohit-| ie" charnever nine iat te eg eeert . ere are many churches in| was then a trackless, wild, Sevier BM Jo LS I, “Well, you ba er not tempt oney. : - 4 motion picture theatre, 1 was great-| this city, whose nervices I hace at, | helped to establish the town ‘of W er = - - - him too far," sald Mra. Jart. “If you| aren to mays WAL SAE iy Fckid vine ment made of human grease, ‘Thid ly surprised to find the same struc-| 'e24ed, which have impressed me as| tauga. He undertook this ventu GREAT patriotic festival, be-, Roman domination about 187 B, C.| worry him’ too much he may call {¥ a# good for & men ot tilnty ae tt) yeny ey te ron onseauence, to ture used as @ chapel. It brought to| P°Pe yeritable fire traps because of in 1772, Soon other colonists join A ginning to-day and lasting| Slightly more than twelve centuriea| your bluff, In fact he told Mr. Jare | 18 for & boy of ; oF Darenta | draw by jot one from among you, who qxind the lack of @ suMocient number of exits, him, Then came the war with the ‘ : ago, in 716, the country was con-| you were so insistent to go to war! 4re fools or saving money Is com. | w' @ plunged alive into boiling wa. By mind activities of the Boston| the difficully of emptying them Shawnves la 1774. Sovier won high | over several days, will beheld In | quered by the Moors, and for a long| nursing that he admired your pluck|mendable. A multitude of men tell|ter and cooked for the salvation of partment which, last year,| quickly id because they are fre- distinction during this conflict. But| Lisbon to celebrate the seventh annl-| time th 4 4 over the land, Af- | and’—— you it is your duty to follow their|all.”" Seized by fear, all the patients wade @ careful investigation into the| quently constructed of : iss hing and contribute to their en-| made haste to report th oI ¢ of wood, Speedy rumblings of a far more serious con-| versary of the overthrow of the n-| ter many bloody wars between the fol- | Home, Clarenc erted Mra, Mud- | teaching | n port themselves as kinds of structures used 4s churches| action should be taken by those in| flict grew louder, The Revolution |, i Wed the eotablichmont ne eR" lowers of the Cross and the Crescent,| ridge-Smith through the speaking richment; I tell you your duty ta to! fully recovered from their ulcers, and in that city, whether or not they were| authority before we are suddenly, was at band. Sevier drew up a me. |S%ehy and the establishment of a re-/in” ihe twelfth century, Alfonao|tube to her ebauffeur, “Oh, won't I yourself, and I ask nothing for the| consequently there was room in the awakened by somo great calamity to| morial in the namo of the Watauga | Public z Henriques, assisted by crusaders on| give it to that old wretch for thia! advice, All that ls possible !s equal| hospital for those who really needed given illus-| the necessity of having at Jeast some | colonists, Which Was presented to the! Anciently Portugal oe I ha . ‘i t y; ’ nity for all, and this we have,|oare. Physicians to-d, was known as|their way to the Holy Land, defeated| Wants me to go to the war, does he, opportunity fe have. lay, by the use mmare teat there ts either « loophole} degree of protection from fire in our) North Carolina Legislature asking Lusitania. After a nine years" Struge the Moorlah Kings, captured Lisbon, while he cavorts around with @ pretty It develops many successful men from|of similar ruses, have disocvered in ding Law or wlge careless | places of worship, t3, M. | that the settlement be annexed to the gle tho Lusitanians submitted to|amd was proclaimed King, nurse?!" \the proletariat and many dunces| many “hospital ” ” | : 4 } { a

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