The evening world. Newspaper, October 5, 1917, Page 22

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’ . t nauen ' ’ Or ‘ ‘ Ye “ oe . ore “an me + - a ' ‘ i . ‘ ave t . bat ! at “ pur for amity * at ir a an dew 1 tend . © oft tend er ' 8 e by t a » is ad " ¢ the What rt r pas ‘ ' faces soften and mer In their unda " " 1 war th f e very f organ their fight is ail to save, to heal and to re ——— WHY TAX EFFORT? HE “surpriee” section in the mew War Tax Bill, which requires mal workere who earn incomes of more than $6,000 fo pay a al éxtra levy of B per cent heir earning that amount, stands revealed only after the President has signed the bill and the tax has berome law Congress is to be tated upon the ingenious manner in which concocted seheme to it evaded public discus uf a deliberately put a general, comprehensive tax on American brains along with war profits and income from invested capital | The do awyere and professional men and women workers x is aimed will doubtless admit that the m, at wiom the extra t joke, such as it is. is on th Kut they will none the less demand to be furnished with some of the ms for imposing upon them an additional burden so unex- pected that apparently statesmanship deemed it wiser to have no talk! about it until the deed was done. | What, moreover, will be the immediate effect of this “surpris upon the amount these same professional workers contribute to the Second Liberty Loan? Can they afford to take as many bonds as they had planned, now that they know there will be a considerable extra levy upon a sub- stantial portion of their incomes? rea | This was the very class which by a little planning and self-denial | was (o absorb a handsome part of each succe: sive war loan, What process of reasoning makes it appear wiser to tax brains aud effort than to solicit their saving BERNSTORFF, BOLO & CO. MERICAN wonder at the talents and activities of the nation’s vividly rexvembered diplomatic guest who last spoke! (and worked) here for Berlin, continues to be challenged limits. The securing of $50," © of German money to “influence mem- bers of Congress” was + paltry matter compared with putting $1,700,000 into the hands « / Bolo, the German spy, for use in France. And even the latter transiction is now believed to have been only an item in the disposal of snore than $25,000,000 intrusted to Count von Bernstorff while in this country, to be placed, lawfully or unlaw- fully, where it would do Germany most good. How many more of those tunnelings, bored and lined with tonic gold, are to be disclosed Teu- It was only recently that even the oxistence of a Bolo P to appeur a matter of any great moment to most Americans. And here they are already concerned as to the sort of marks he may have set on some of their own fellow countrymen, . That von Bernstorff bag of tricks was. he didn’t carry the best on top. ‘asha began , indeed, a deep one. And Letters From the Pe Officer W Add AF. OW To the Fetitor of The Brening World 1 noticed a letter headed “Naval Militia Methods Blamed” In a recent edition of The Evening World. Willly ' ople e efi lp to a4 Without Arrows or Raye. To the Flor of Tie Fveniog Worm Can you tell me the te 2 cent plocw dntot tesap en” OF & 2 CONSTANT READER. ™ i you please refer "A, P. H." to me so he ied ‘ inset Years From that I can get at the details of the| To the Raitor of The Mrening Worth case about which he complains? Kindly Jet me know if 1 could get 1 would appreciate it If you will let wy Aaa) ciilgenshtp papers, 1 ey me have the names and addresses of| boon Wetn ts One eH! WO. Thu mUnLrY Heven y lected to get my first paper M. KF, individuals who make reports of this character so that | can take the n esvary steps to investigate them Prevent a recurrence of “gross mi but Sunday, management.” Cc. MILL ‘To the EAitor of The Brening Wc Commander U, 8. Navy, Please let me know what day 280 Broadway %, 1879, fell oF nae aay Tune hg _ . . = Hits rom Sharp Wits Some men marry partners and) boast about tt before yor some burdens, It is not always pos- U pay for tt sible to tell in advance which she 1s going to be.—Toledo Blade. Binghamton Press You can aiways Matte Asking bis advice, and This is diMcult for a woman: To|times curse him by believe the nice little things she tells |delphia Record r women about ber husband.—| 32s (8 Chicago News. “Dollars to doughnuts’ ee even money bet.— Rost: If every man were his own food co 8 6 controller the price of remedies for| An exch man by An BOMe= Phila. you ¢ using it is now an Transcript. nee thinks that “the dyzpepsia | would drop. — Columbia | our boys wiles Prehs awit ie tae GC) State. foctly Killing.” U roan tea see nothing of murderous. Whtladelphia It t In the automobile business, | 'nau-rer as almost everything 6 the 2. 9 of smallest Sivver has the loudest horn. | Trophies of the Hunt P Ps 1 aed a | : ornrg. e % - * \ a“ r \ ~~ Boro ‘ ¢ > Pasna fior Fvening World Daily Magazine nr - | Three Rocks That Wreck Marriage THE OUTSIDE INFLUENCE, By Sophie Irene Loeb. ROM the varlous le I receive | They seemed to to please F in which people exponnd thy! Meople outside t wn four Ww happinorstn mar-|eall in wome friend of the family. t riage, 1 have se 8 referee fatad three of the | UC It were dectded against the hus ie . hy the woult ky” foe sev most my m Of leral days to eome, aed if it & de wa samme opinion sUTl would econ tin Many arguments brought about quacr The woman would r to her friends and ¢ Tie Hite oubles to ities SMM. AW a Kener ng they npathized wh tsi ily Last left her thinkin Wis a most Straws" 1 martyr, the husband and wife burden each | (Tien he would strong divapproy ot with thelr trifin , eo thom secretly. When the big much that finally it grow juarrel came and she left him t and gets on their nerves, and ends who sided w or expressed 2 ipproval of her « ind told her ni Isliike een © 1 to dialtke om was quite righ KO to In this article T have nother couple that drifted apart ) Mut,as usual with such things, they Up & marriage that might have 1 lid nothing to ‘or to at They were ma to adjust t ja happy union. en OL Rare Sue very young and lived in a »m Marree tory P loge, having “grown up together that af it had not thi The young manta business taterjoutside influence they Mave called him to the large elty, They} sone en happy to the very end, Por , y had known f many were very glad to come. It way a filey tad known wach othvr ao ew venture, Thoy were both youn |) i happy because,there wom no “out and life loomed up v joyous 4 ih nihvence deed. Hach reflected that {f he had been Rares fas successful and, {careful to settle his differences The young man was su and, (CARN ohtegelg a sane in a social way, th became ave l inate etions intluence him quainted with several very nice they MW ha yu Phe young woman was ambition noir carly days: ens wanted to bo like her city’ « PE Ae BR a Hformed a close friendstity with tw ana. smother + Ne three women and they helped in-law it the Jike them. ‘Pat iy to say of a friend Imes it Jdeetde many th for | " f ) ouple t style of her d Me “ | dishes, wh to buy But ‘ i et outald Now, this would nfluen f MI 1 cou) J well but for the fact formed |iust live: thelr: tw maketh lithe wife's opinions and she locket t inion outsider for what | them as the alpha ang omega of prog worth 1, Ba methods. uke y form with Therefore when y diseu , a what € uo really want wend and thew were between the hus | wife's contentions up with “but Mr “What would Mrs aid" such and such a thing \waye her decision was bused Peatia HER possible approval or “isapproval of 8 MEKICAN } friends when she A ontributed f the mod- analyzed a situa England uses 70,000 tons of stoppers annually in her bottling establish- . ments. Some corking busine Experience ts Uke @ motor car, you\Mompb!s Commercial Appeal Los Angeles Times. oof before she took action ern in f warfar This attitude somehow be tel with whieh the pr Met dsb a, for tho husband txed ing althou, American of his new ail w R 2 = | by what the mat in non | A not alway n the firat | working next to him would think a ‘ rfect struments jit When he invited a frend The UbiIbArne | i) Aterican in house he always asked his wite t lyvention, ‘The tha gun being range things as he had found them in|used by the 13 j + Was in- the friend's house #0 ay to moasure | yeuted by an Aq Army officer, \up with him, lbut it was the 1 ) vbo first rec. In & word, with this couple ognized the merita of (he gun body's views superseded their ows The fret notewor by improvement The Jarr Fam ily | By Roy L. MeCardell 1 if we will only be nice | new frocks and the Chairwoman So her remarks might as well vo not been uttered. Among | Women only the realities count, New frocks are realities. Mrs. Sowers ratsed her votce ww artillery invented by an Amorican | Silly. remarking that certain mem- waa the Varrott gun, the creation of bers should pay thelr dues rather Robert Parker Parrott, Who Was born {than nd all thelr money on vain in Lee, N. Hy U3 years ago to-day. | ador He xriduated from West Point ty iaci, and afier servile aw an ia Mut Mrs, Jarr, while Mrs. Mud- uetor and in the War dsuinot the | dee Smith and Mrs. Stryver tttered Crecks he resigned his con val, rose to a point of order to und Hesdme -mUBEHIALen ASH OF (ave |suzeest that the members send their hon foundry at Cold spring eal Beier baniys Ar While engaged in that capacity be |%'! fecks to war sufferers, That hrew the whole assemblage Into a invented the Well-known Parrott gun, or rifle cannon, which he placed at the disposition of che United States! for Government. ‘This cannon. re 1 of its first great test in the Civil War t, those having new frocks voting the measure and those conscious their old frocks fighting strenu- ously against it poright, 117, by the Brew 1 Co. (Pho New York Evening World), 6ETQUT L thought the Suffer "Nice to them?" interrupted Mra, movement was In abeyance Sowers. “Do you speak of the siren during the war,’ sald Mrs 4 of the parasite woman? Do you Jarr, wis at woman may seek to rule were willing to let it be,” tn only through the emotions?” Mrs. Sow who had culled, as sh Well, {t's been a good way, I expressed It, “to get out the ve think,” sald Mrs. Jarr, “When you hough the ladies could not vote ‘t rule a man that way you can't even after they got out. rule him at all" quiescent until the Le el "A truce to all this!” said Mrs. | to Woman's Suffrage Sow “We are holding a meeting to newspapers to the t "That, tnt Are you for us or against us? the face of cosinic umstances of If Cause concerns you, you will 1 import—such as the present come! World War—the silly sentimentulism | The Cause did not concern Mra, ofthe Feminist Movement had proved Jorr so much, but she had a new evanescent!" Then,” sald Mrs, Sow- {dress and this would be a fine occa ers, impressively, “we got busy, to rouse the envy of her friends Haven't you seen the posters, ‘If We) with it, she thou So she went Are Good Enough to Work With You, (0 the meeting with the lady who ind Fight With You, Why Shouldn't | w etting out the vote. Wo Vote With You? The meeting was being held In the | “Well—ahem!—ado you think the| Wlstaria Room of the Hotel St. Croe- expression ‘Fight With Yout a par- | * ind Mrs, Jarre lingered tn the culurly buppy one? asked Mrs room with Mrs, Mudridge-Smith | Tavis uid Mra, Stryver, affecting not to “If the men want us to stop tice her new frock. I hearing ing—they can take 0) 1 the meeting was under full headway of ‘with’ as they like—let ¢ vol Mrs. Jarre and her two friends us the ballot!” sald Mrs, Sower ! In and were In happy con- “Don't you think at n of the fact ¢t ‘We will tight WITH you’ (rathe 1 hiatus In the proc than express it, ‘bY your wil Mrs. Mudridge-Smith and antagonize omen t larg uinst | M ' r had new frocks tog, woman's rights?” asked M irr. | Mrs. Sowers was in the chair and Don't you think that wor filled) Pipped her gavel smartly and ree | in thelr militant efforts to coorce hed loudly and actdly, “Those nen into giving them the suffrage in | ne late should enter with leas land, just as the Kalser tent it The Cause ts for the failed? The Kaiser has only horritted| Welfare of women and its meetings the world; he has not terrified tt ire not vehloles to advertise the il- do not approve of the para lors of certain of its members!” remarked Mrs, Sowers, Wut Mrs, Jarr and her friends took “Well, [think that the pleketing of|the remark as theugh not uttered at the White House by the Suffragette They knew they had new frocks, during the war has harmed ey k Mrs, Sowers hadn't ( more than helped it," ew frock, and they knew she knew Jarr, “Now, 1 think y knew it, They also knew the beginning to a «fest of the assemblage knew who had The Dangerous Age of Man By Helen Row . err wre “e . = ’ oof avging over 1 he 5 ' rf ‘ A » THIN Or an 4 & bachelor apartmen Ort ‘ ‘ t at » fashionable «jut Ie re 4 To dream O and well-mended bose haded eading lamps, but u r at and romelody to clean bie safety raror fle point at wei tations with fiappere and chorus girls and other men's , t Kk tawdry to him And vartety tiself has become mono A © mad gayety of the night before t4 no longer worth ihe beadache of the n ter—and he is desperately LONELY And the only Novelty left tn all the wide world for tim Is MARRIAGE And t He meets & GIRT oF a widow, or a divor ANY girl w {t doown’t matter She may not be half en beautiful, or itable, or sweet, oF As the girl he loved and fled from prectptt nly She 1 anet that he needs or wa as n 3 ay be everything and all that he SHOULDN'T marry But he the MARRYING mood And she tvok t like “Pate” i Ho drapes ber with all the Mlusions and clothes Wer atty ail the virtues of his Ideal And hot muffing for breakfast, and rooms filled with sachet and femluine Hh Kenae Of atties and cellars and clot things fn, Of broiled steaks and good salad dressings And REST and peace and quiet compantonsiip. And If she happens to WANT him she marries him! he would have to be a tripte-plated fool to fall.) a if it turns out wi pptly he blames tt on Mate—or the woman But if tt turns out happily he lays ft to hls own pe rapleacity, Alas, it seems almost a shame to takd the wedd The world would be a wfidern If it weren't for the Dan Jorets and dear fami! ar places to KEEP ing ring—and y of apiusters rous Age of Man! ForWhomtheArmy Camps _ Were Named | By James C. Young Popyright, WIT, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Worl!) NO. 8—CAMP GORDON, ATLANTA, GA, HE closing chapter of the Civil|tion, Ho began the practice ot law War had opened. Lee's army lus a y 3 unk man, but on the out- clinging desperately to Ap-| break of war in 1861 he laid aside | : pomattox Court |!egal problems for the grim business was House, one of ee | ahead: Hie was made Captain, Ma- vital points be- | jor, Lieutenant-Colonel, In quick suc- fore Richmond. | cession, advancing rank by rank uns On every side/tii he bocume Lieutenant-Gen «1 they were har-| vith command of one wing of the ried by Grant's enveloping move- Ariny of Virginia. \ Badly wounded Ave times, Gore fon fought throughout ment. Outnum- the war. ‘To bis wife he gave credit bered, starved, for his recovery, Sho attended him ragged, with during the whole confict, and It was scant ammuni- | her care that restored bim to beulth tion, these few | Upon each occasion, aa thousandsof men) When the Confederate army wae hud held up for|disbanded after the fall of Rich- |months the whole conce ed pow- | ond, Gordon made an address to jer of the North, Slowly Grant was/is men that stands as a model of bending back the Confederate wings. | cloquenc urging them to retura Appomattox had become the pivot | home, accept the inevitable, and be- and must be held. Jolin B. Gordon, Lieutenant-Gen- eral, C, 8. A. made a last hi gin the work of reconstruction, He sounded that note for years after. ward, becoming one of the command- ‘ole ate |tempt to stop the Federal advance, |! figures in Southern affutra, In Mustering every man available, he | 1878 Gordon was elected to the Unit- placed himself at thelr head, Like a|ed Statey Senate and again in 1979, whirlwind this ragged legion came | He resigned the next year, was elect- down upon the Union line. Its pow- | CH ian age! Gaeormin In 18HG, the er was not to be stopped nor stayed. | senate two years later, The © crumpled, prisoners and ar-| As lnwyer, statesman and wold |tillery falling Into the hands of the Gorden ranked with the ab men snendaraten twas: ‘Ghantonte |e his say He lived to see the South it effort, and ‘t was useless, lor ne ; ied ry 80d the. Oud wounds healed. the Confederates guve way elsewhere, Appomattox and the cause of the South were lost, | ‘The name’ of this gallunt soldier 4 been chosen by the Government | for the new army cantonment ut |lanta, Ga. He was a Georgian, | Luminous Belt To Save Lives IW YORK inventor has just ty-fifth Governor of the nd | patented a luminous lifebelt jlong Its representative in the Senate. which should be as great a | But the dedication of the camp to| factor in saving human life as the |Gen. Gordon signifies a great deal! original belt. By means of his de. more—that the breach of fifty years}, ce all lifebelts would be supplied |ago has been completely healed, and | with a dry battery, 1 to sey that the United States proud to! eral incandes placed send forth its Elghty-Second ptvi- | about the t ts would be | automatically turned on sion from 4 cump bearing the name of 80 fine a soldier. jrecruited fri The benene in the case of ean be easily Jof such a contrivanc Tt 1s now being |, shipwreck at night m Alabama, Georgla aad very year many |i ern hy es are Florida troops. 1 suse persons equipped with | Gordon was born in Upson County | Ufebelts canoe be, found atten hee i goes down, on the durkecs July 6 1892, son of an old Seoteh | night these luminous belts woutsee® family, His great-grandfather was 1 thelr ponition to te. searching par. his invention it Urpriaing that euch aken long thes, seoms truly progressive otep was not t ago Jone of seven brothers who came to In the face of t North Carolina and Virginia, and all of the seven fought in the Revolu-

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