The evening world. Newspaper, November 12, 1917, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

= on gem ee Rk gilt tt = : Evening World Daily Magazine Monday, November 12, 1917" | 7 Cre efihiity Baiorid. Enthroned? ntetiae, By J. H. Cassel | | Sayings of Mrs. Solomon « Nee Tore Coening Wray aT | 7 ne Ten ton ee Von 4 By Helen Rowland tow eT Fees Thre Post-Otfice at New York as Hecond Ciaas Ma\inr cape Ratee Piventng |For Entiend ant the Continent Sand for nite Ali Countries tn tne Internat ‘ Fostal Union. . On oe rene 15.40 ber} One fad a 140 H Se thE a } Cmvrae 190 r oo Hn ain Wands, | ¥ DAUGHTER, lgcharge thee, beware how thow persecutest 6 Mag M with thy letters; yea, how thy pen drippeth sentiment, For a damerl's first love note, like unto her first tear, Gap touch @ man’s heart and awaken tender emotions, her THINTY-FIR@T toucheth only a tender nerve awakeneth only bin weariness. Lo, when first a youth receiveth @ missive@rom @ NEW damsel he ie mildly astonished and highly foe tered. He openeth It with much flourish before the eyes of the whole office force. He layeth it ostentatiously upon his desk, where the chief and the office boy may Ob serve it es na” in an pleased as 4 small boy with a new so1dibiny Hut in time he beginneth to take her seriously and groweth secretive, Heo bideth her letters hastily within the left-hand pocket — bi heart. He sneaketh them out when none is looking He readeth them over unto three times three time ' He toucheth them to bis lips, guiltily The fragrance of her sachet is as incense in his nostrils He ie delighted with the “cuteness” of her scrawly handwriting, He burryeth to meet the postman in the morning. He snatcheth bis mail eagerly. He sniffeth through it for the scent of her letter, He flingeth aside all others—the check from his broker, the annownee- ment from his bankers, the bill from his tailor-until he hath read “HERS” and pondered over it He gazeth dreamily out of the window, murmuring ow I wonder what she meant by THAT!” He is a nuisance about the office and a trial to his stenographer. Yea, he is “hard hit!” Yet, alas how mutable are all things sweet! How soon a pleasure Ls cometh a habit, and a privilege sinketh to the level of a duty! For in time her daily missive becometh, as the shaving of his chin aa@ the brushing of bis hair, a morning custom. He glanceth at it casually and layeth it aside until he hath finished reading his IMPORTANT mail He delayeth answering it until the last moment and cheweth his pen- handle impatiently. He can think of NOTHING to say! In desperation he seribbleth three sentences all over the pag€. elt SESE FES TS SS a ee * VOLUME 58........ + NO, 20,687 START ANOTHER SPECIAL. HE arrest last Saturday of forty-one woman suffragiate, includ ing twelve from this city, who deliberately combined to keep up the picketing nuisance outside the White House gates, followed by the usual efforts to make the Government of the United, States appear a merciless tyrant and these women martyrs, again! forose the question of suffrage methods upon a nation that neods all ite attention and al) its enorgy for far more pressing matters. | From no point of view can this be more unfortunate than from that of the suffrage cause itself. | Never has public opinion in the Kast been more kindly to suffrage or more favorable to the realization of its hopes. | The great and deserved triumph which the suffragists of this State are now celebrating came as significant proof of the new spirit! with which even many of its former enemies are beginning to regard| euttrage. | Many a man who has watched the admirable work American women have done to help the nation go valiantly and efficiently to; war, who thinks with deep and grateful reverence of the thousands of American nurses pledged to heroic service of mercy and healing overseas, has changed his views and his vote, Rallying to the supreme cause of democracy has given a new breadth to ideals of equality. | SPR RENE TREE BETS Te 6 : 4 Tt women would only realize it, this is their great hour—far too, He giveth it to his stenographer to mail « big to be spoiled by misguided and unseemly efforts to use a national | And she that heedeth not THIS warning is as a kitfn that playeth é to advance their political plans. ete a Bal es a fee ad te ela risis , ‘or in six months her letters shall be fot a They bring a Federal Suffrage Amendment no nearer by drag- unopened, even tn the discard with his taflor's bills, and ihe acto ging on the arm and clamoring at the ear of a Government gravely tire advertisements, and the patent medicine circulars, beside his desk. An pre-occupied. she shall be known within the gates no more, For her name shall be It is in fact the insufferable smallness of their attitude which “Has-been.” e does these picketing suffragiste'in Washington most harm: And, peradventure, after many years, when he cometh upon a bundle f. rea sans is pect pecs f ae " ; of her first letters at the back of his desk he shall have forgotten the han } 0 in an embarrassing writing thereof, and shall read them curiously and with much amusement, position,” one of them exults, saying: } And straightway, at the signal, more delegations from New York ow who the deuce IS ‘Honeygirl,’ and when could I have been se f and elsewhere take trains for Washington to assail an overburdened : Ree a a th lal be President with demands that he tell why “splendid women, loving wea . meee will ee tl ree and fashion it into pipe-lighters, f wherewith to save matches in war time, ‘ * liberty, are arrested” in free America. Setah! i Calling for volunteers to go on one of these special trains from t — = — i\ his tity, a suffrage leader crit T } J EF ‘ € Micha iar erence pe Jarr Family , r “C's > At a moment when the nation is counting its first dead and By Roy L. McCardell é wounded in « great and terrible struggle for the safety of its insti- Copyright, 1917, by The Preas Publishing (>, (The New York Erening World). tutions and ideals, to be told that “pickets are risking their lives for — —= es — — ae ——-__—_ 66 A ND now that Emma Tutwilér) latest object of his wiles, Miss Core the women of the country” b i ai id . ~~ is married, [ don’t see why| Hickett, j yy impeding sidewalk traffic for the t ( € < oe M ee) S d 5 ‘ 4 4 « « Cora Hickett can't get a © two hi hardl, { express purpose of getting themselves arrested in order to “embarrass or om e rmy am ps a un a y husband,” said Mrs. car musingly.| when tie ann re i reag. sett : the Government,” can arouse in the majority of sane Americans, men| |) a | : : Horace K. Hickett, Miss Cora Hicks : and women, no sentiments save those of anger and disgust. | ere | ame ‘ a ‘ rc “Give it up,” interrupted Mr. Jarr.|ett's fat and pompous papa, came j 8" legu IL beach ae | ¢ . “Almost ever since we have been| puffing in behind them, as thi h ; Tf these White House pickets, after due warnings, are arrested B J , : $ ' =aal!! married you have tried to get Jack| had trailed them here, pha } and fined or imprisoned, wherein is their punishment more seve y. ames C. Young IT’S LOVE THAT MAKES THE WORLD GO ROUND Silver in the trap of matrimony. You! “Where bt ibis Copyright, 1917, by Thi Y 5 is he?” snorted the pom | than that which would be inflicted upon members of any organization, eee sew Prews Publishing Co, (The New York Byeoing World) OME one once put to Mrs.|money, nor genius, nor human|tried to marry him to Clara Mud-| pous papa, “Where is the wretch i Se or peg ela aig lar a 6 i lo, 24.—CAMP LOGAN, HOUSTON, TEXAS Thomas A. Kdison, the wife of| ability, but LOVE that makes the|tidge-Smith, when she was Clara| who is trifling with the affections of i} B ” pers! similar demonstrations? HEN the Civil War broke) before Vicksburg, and when the the great inventor, the question: | world go round Mudridge and had neither husband| my child?" | ly what justice or logic can suffrage invoke the names or position John A. Logan was in Wash-| mines were set off that finally opened “What ts your] And love knows no limitations, It| "or hyphen, as she has now, You did|' Mr. Silver attempted to execute us| | ofthese women pickets to stir ecial 8 athy eith ington. Troops were hur-|a way into the city, Logan led the as- great object in| is boundless. The most touching and| set her a husband through your ma-| flank movement and retreat, but the / be dh ympethy either for them or| reaiy mustered to repel an expected|eault. Afterward he was placed in lite?” |the most perfect human expression of | Chinations, but not the victim you| way was blocked. s \ cause? movement against the capital, Logan | command of th 4 é hold. Quick flash | love 49 in, the 1 1 7 he | expected. Then you tried t It block ei + of the captured atronghold. uick as a flas! ve is in the home. It may be the en you tried to marry was blocked by reason of | Is not the very ciroumstance that their refinement and nobility had served as an officer in the Mex-} Tho high quality of Logan's leader- and with thejlove of a wife for a husband, or a| Poor Jack to one of the Cackleberry | Quick-witted Miss Hickett thro 4 } offecling are paraded in order to make the Government Arrean ore : 4 ‘can War, but was| ship again was demonstrated during glow of a su-| mother for a child, or of a son or|éitls, which one you cared not, but| Yer arms around the trifler and ety: . , ‘ no longer tn the| the drive of Sherman which ended at preme love in her|% daughtef for a parent. But it will| there was safety in numbers. Jack,| Ine ther, you shall not strike | | ewael in expecting them to restrain themselves, in danger of being army, When {t|the sea, He was second in command eyes, came the/ find Its fruition in the home. There; tHe wise old bird, made love to them | him ee ' taken as @ eingular commentary on the mental fitness of women gen- became apparent| under McPherson in the Battle of answe 1s something in the very sound of that} both and they got to fighting with| thing is all right,” said Mr t to receive the vote? that a major en-/ Atlanta. When that leader met his “The conserva-| ¥ord “home” that sweeps the heart- each other and neither got him,| Jarr, coming to the rescue of his hi} wher el gagement was to! death I k strings and makes the t and” |ral. “No h h nis ce ogan took charge and carried tion of Mr. Edi- makes sweetest music " * mi “o harm has been done, I'm The . amy aprytoetin peg ig area = Party of be fought he pro-| the Federal arms to victory. Cie sewer? son.” ‘to human ears. ‘There can be no home sc, Mave Rotioed,” intersected: airs, | Pure! | this State earer than ever that its cured a uniform| After the fighting had come.to an id I wonder how|W!thout love, no matter how much|Jarr, “that young bachelors are | “Why, then, does he trifle?” bele | | programme neither includes nor tacitly approves a continuance of and a musket,|ecnd Logan went home again, and in|many young wives—yes, and old ones, /S°!4 has gone into its making, And | Most hopeless, but old bachelors are| lowed old man Hickett. “Why ts the | patkoting at the White House. caught up with| 1866 was elected to Congress, wherc|too—could answer the same question !°V¢ 18 the nearest and surest ap-| Not so. Jack Silver is no longer as) “MS4wement not announced? I eare ii ; It the Federal aacent the Federal forces| he continued until 1871, entering the|in the sain way.’ Tt 1s no selfish pur-| Tach to God that has been given | Young as he used to be, ‘The older a| ®¢t for his millions!” i smendment can ‘be won at all it can be won by just before the|Senate in that year, He won a rep-| pose, this touching tribute of Mrs,|‘® mortal powers, bachelor gets the more timid and} Jack Silver had no million, but hie campaign methods which do not involve continual nagging and ham- - Battle of Bull utation for forceful oratory and had| Edison to the great, silent wizard,|, Mave you ever stopped taconsider | sentimental he becomes, Cora Hick-| Was well able to support a wife even meting on the nation’s nerves at an epoch of extraordi : Run, and did good service in that/an active part in shaping the policies| whose struggle to fame she has !2°W much of the world’s achievements] ett thinks" In these high cost of living times, so tension, Taordinary national| confict. Afterward he returned to] of the Nation, Perhaps he is best re-| shared. Love is never selfish, It 1s 2%¢ traceable directly to the fuctor of} “What does Cora Hickett think?"| It was all the same. a7 his home in Illinois, raised a regi-| membered for his @ stimulating love, always ready to| @8ked Mr, Jarr “Let me get at the old stiff!” whis- - a jaming patriotism, | all-seeing, all-enduring, all-embrac- |", NECER S ‘i Too many trains are carrying protests to the President, ment of infantry, was appointed its| which was so often in evidence. The|ing. It was not only the love of aj *¥° * mand over the roumh spots, al- vane a AL mind) replied Mrs bered Mr. Silver to Mr. Jarr. “Let i It’s @ good time for suffrage in New York to st Colonel, and less than two months/ Republican Party named him as the| wife for a husband, a wife who was | “4)% tuned to the right sympathy at ee Jack Silver has been pay- | me hand him just ono wallop and I'l stocked with plain talk for tho pi © start a special! iater ted the men into battle, Such|running mate of James G. Blaine in| also a comrade, that inspired Mrs, | JUS the Fight moment? Glow inany of | Ing her attention, taking her out in| die happy or get married or be hung plain talk for the picketers, was the character of the man whose] 1684, after he had received slxty-three] Edison's statement, but the love of (20 Stat men of American history | his new car taking her to cabarets | or anything!” —————$— —|name ts borne by the army cainp at| votes as the party candidate for Pres-| the community, the love of society, (ONS helm sreatness, in a very definite and the theatres, and she has told] Perhaps tho heavy father realised : Houston, Tex., where the 33d Division | ident way, to their wives? How often has| her father.” that violence might defeat hi , 5 | the love of humanity. She was con “What': 4 ; at his daugh- Hits From Sha tp Wits 8 being mobilised. It will consist] Gen. Logan was largely inatru-|serving, protecting, guarding her| (ne l0¥e Of the little woman at home--| | Whats her kick? Why should she| er's chances. He did not know what ; All the world's stage, But every) Note that every eternal love tri. | VBONY of Iilinols troops. mental in the organisation of the] wonderful husband not alone for him- | blot trom hav vee corded the eeue, | he didn't payer Ne eee ee te eulain bachelor had whis- } man’s not @ headliner, that’s the angle always has at least three sharp | He fought under Grant throughout|Grand Army of the Republic, and| self, or for herself, but for the whole|¢al gap in the great crisia? 18 tale ran ere hereatiom: ene | ered 18 An darn, but be preamp ' troubl corners,—Omaha Heo, the Cumberland and Tennessee cam-| was elected its Commander in Chief | world : | Your husband, or husband-to-be, | Aon! take her out in his new cay and | by the hand and exclaimed: “Spoken } rik ia’ eal And) waa BhCt three inet at lia! Whe seg0ad Balieat cetamaneat | ooe cae (nought tte |may not be on the firing line of great | ® cabarets and theatres, then she| lke a true man! 1 knew your intone t Gometimes a woman asks her bus-|__Bome people never profit b; es NsAaladn Aina. ‘ M sam ught is true in the}national achievements, but he {is on| Might complain,” tions were honorable! D. . k profit by their] Fort pon his return to] It also was due to } hi Do not flutter F Wand's advice 20 that abe'll be in a [CM Mistakes so long as they ‘can| service he was made BD ' © his efforts that] case of every wife with the same in-|the firing line of the day's work, with| “But you know Jack Silver is a| litle bird!” he added to Mis daughe ‘ service hi ade Brigadier Gen-|wo have May 8 Memorial Day.|spiration and the same mission. Your|#!! of Its little, irritating, discourag-| trier,” said Mrs, “| ter, who was convulsively sobbing {a ; make aomething out of other people’ position to take the opposite course.— | “Panageipnia tecara People’s. | oral of Volunteers. It was not long| He conceived that such a day should s problems and set-backs. He may Seca m erent iat |e. aemn oF Bar Chicago News. husband may not be so great in the - ; be set aside in tribute Li gt P irae ™4Y! with Clara Mudridge-8mi: “Oh, how tt gsiol eda sic Getitha axsin’ tacalved pragsalian to ; ribute to the memory , ™ not labor at a desk but at a bench, go-Smith till n, how happy | am that my dear It takes a man with « poor memory| The man who welgns his words |the rank of Major General As such | Qftte Neh Who bad preserved. the eyes of the world as Thomas A. Edi-| but your love means as much to him| finally, in despair, the poor thing|P&Pd and my own. sweet precious who can really forget hie troubles |REVer gives short measure, espeoiate | i bore # ieading part In opeeatnen {Walon As every one knows, that] son, but he s—or should be~great in|and to the world dynamo of love us| married a man old enough to be her| Wtck Should be reconciled! “Watert ¢ Memphis Commercial Appeal. If he Js given to the use of menqule +18 opers a W generally observed. your eyes, You have consecrated to|thoush he wore the Lresident of the| father, He trifled with Emma Tut-| “Here, (Ped Mise Hlckete, > . . . pedalian verbi; e. m " >, . 8 | oc . a burag vile: y 4 Z a ‘ Be her som rl Be crsra aciNeu ka‘ aG lmcrasaive Haka Desaret News. him your love, your devotion, your|of a nation. It is not only love in high] Wller and she married Rodorick | cried Mr. Silver eagerly, Nod whue front—all shows are good on the bill-|_ Much of what seem ‘i service, and, because you have done| places, but love in low places that| Tynnefoyle, and he trifled with the | Ut trying to get his hat, he rushed | boards.—Boston Transcript, |{1s very old stuff.—Albany Journzine” #0, you are contributing in your way | Counts Tne tare leg mand the | cugkleberry girle—here they come| “ie evidently hag’ i) : : up of mi e e ; » evidently hi j 8 oe 6 to the greatest dynamo of the world,|mime is true of the great ocean of | 2O¥ ad set his mind upon obtaining water from the 5 Are you contributing your rip-| But {t wasn't the Cackleberry girts| Mexico, for he. plun ais" et P ged down the At that, howeve: we presume a| When gossip comes in at the door, Bite m in the days of its glory | being built by the British connecting | the dynamo of love—for after all, wa| ld five-cent cigar at y other price | Wave a sweet farewell to reputations. the metropolis of the world and| the city with the Persian Gulf. This h fe m + orld te Persian Gulf, lways forced back to the su-|P that were coming, It was that hard-| St#/rs and out the street d will smell the same.—Philadelphia In- | Milwaukee ws. to-day |railway passe 4 are ® su f ard) oor and y-day the centre of bloody bat- anaes urus, birth- act eve! | We are tn the midst of the greatest | ened trifler w: nia’ aia headed south, and has no quirer, eee place of St. Paul, and the ruins of | Preme fact everywhere that {t is notlorisig of our national history—the v with female affections, seen, it since been tles between the opposing groups o! Jack Silver, and with him was thel ca ‘The man who can 5 ineveh and Babylon, the ¢ = =| greatest crisis orld y. ay t A woman has a hard time convinc-|troubles. hash’, any, Minghamton| Rations in the World War, will cele-| capitals of the ancient world, Neat A CYCLONE 8TO Tt AR Ey OR — But Gay will comme! ing herself that her children could be | Press brate to-day its 1,164th birthday, Tho] Bagdad the vast palace of King Ne- = i, RY, at times, and we are terrified at the Firs or) er 7 = amarter’ than they” are--Chicago atte tity wan founded by the Catton at | buchadneszar is now completely exe] 667 PHAT story,” sald Representa. | carnage of blood. Love 1s meeting Its irst Defender of American Pre pane age Wee artaee: bene tae who reads the) mingur, It was in the ninth century | “yee, tive Gardner at a Providence | supreme test, and that great over. ——— = ——————— : narriage license list and then re- |™ ae ‘agdad's grandeur has vanished reception, apropos of a hy-|Whelming love of humanity, whic ATE plays curious trick! tl If you can help a thing, help it and) Marks see by the paper the fools|that Harun Al Rashid, of blessed|aimost completely, The ‘ “y < ‘} Yl alone can make men brothers, is 4 ricks with) published in the don't worry; if you can't help a thing,| 4!* Not ail dead yet."—Toledo Blade, | momory, raised the city to its highest | of Bagdad after’ the wor ‘will, of| Sevotnes plot, ta. vel ytiahy Teint | trembling in the balance, | Ite failure eh ae Soinets Fhe mag won| ASO 1b Made Ae oe 6 press in Ame in Fundamental w Me 01 1 e ec: mphis Commercial Appeal MS are to Shoot} sfegopotamian city, known to Ocei.|2&ct¥se the nations will have thelr} “Once, in Texas, 1 came upon a tall | the millions of American homes, for prison, For some time he edited his straight. —Desere . own houses ¢ ; | 3 a ; Ws, i , ‘ arp . \ houses to put in order before| chimney, like a factory chimney, ris- |‘ + {oa was @ German, It was just 184| paper from behi been Kissed probably. thinks Bthat| ‘The ancient party who dubbed t jeu of the Arabian ‘Nights vemay | tantnge ie roenTad to seek OTerT LPR rritad a weiaite eatin ys {RS | years ago that this man, John Peter|at length released soa armupe gts somabosre got to begin it.—Bing-|women the ntle. sex" evidently e day again become an important] time comes, howov wae pues Naldgdc i id 08 paiva, what | world crisis. Zenger, was brought to trial for | ee the paper until his death, amton Pres i ney ritnes 1 a bargain counter trade oenire by the building of the | ik be the Br “who will come That ain't no chimney, aid the|y Are you daing ron pit So keep the newspaper Ibel which resulted from| "phe peaueatinal of m “Am 1 the only ( od Wel er AAKiatas ThRGN RatGra the sean wall pote tie Basdad railways, Thon the | native, & well.” Stee vour community? For, |RewWsPaper criticisms passed on Brit-|was the first case of ete on loved?” she usked. The who go through thelin the hands of the Germans, whol cite will coho eet, oF tne ancient) A well? said J yeare than ever, love Will be our life: |ish public officials, |side of the ‘Atlantic, and aoueee bly. “You are the only 0 r world | hilest of banpinecs in 2 constructing GaRiWAa (ak iMad ni ip td the BH Ree th Es 1 Jeff jine now-—more than ever it will be enger founded the New York|SFeat Public excitement, When Zen: ex embraced,”—Wbiladeipuia ais ut the fact Wuat happiness may| irom Keniu, the Lerminus of tie Aa lonce mole 4 “iid a thovsand| ber aj vn and Inulide vuttt [rove that will m ke the world 80) Weekly Journal, the second news| ered a ive Soauital 4 i cee irene nevi . PAE - ne nu dic and| ber upside down and Inside ou 1BN8 ! lered a great victory for x hUadelphis Hacord | atollan 2 Another road was years 4ua, "Washington Star, | "aggaumiaht 1017, be the Beli Byadicate, Lae) Lpwper in New Youk, The paper waa ciples of Lee sbexch wad @ free press ’

Other pages from this issue: