The evening world. Newspaper, October 7, 1918, Page 15

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HOME PAGE * Monday, October 7, 1918 Money and Happiness By wt Rev. Thomas B. Gregory Copyright, 1918,/by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) DISTINGUISHED American, worth tens of millions of dollars, if not scores of millions, declared the other day speech at the Salmagundi Club banquet, “There has never been a| fime in my life that my riches gave me any happiness.” Of course not. There are a whole lot of things that money can give, But the best thing of all, our being’s “end and aim,” happiness, it can not Give, Such is the verdict of the experience of human beings in all lands gad through all the ages. There are plenty of happy people in the world, Wut they are not happy on account of the money they possess. qj I am personally acquainted with an old multi-millionaire who stands Weady at any hour of the day or night to hand over a certified check for) @ round million of dollars to any one who will actually help him to Month of happiness.” The poor old fellow can find no one who is prepared to accept his offer. ‘The hoon he is seeking and which he is ready to pay for so hands fe ‘hotin the market, nor, for that matter, is it at the disposal of any one Who might be inclined to offer it to him. , The man who made that speech at the Salmagundi Club.owus the finest house in New York; but it is not in the power of that palatial home fo make a man happy. "The man who made that speech at the Salmagundi Club has so much @éney that he {s quite unable to keep tab on it; man and Woman on earth had such wealth there would be no increase In the means Of-real happiness, for it would be true then, as it is true now, that real Bappiness depends not upon what one has in his purse, but rather upon what one has in his mind and heart. *® With the right DISPOSITION—the right thoughts and feelings, the Wight way of looking at things, the millionaire may be as Lappy ae Lhe man who diacks bis shoes or mows his lawn; but without the disposition Be'Will have to plug along the best he can with his millions and his MISERY. * It is not in what we HAVE but in what we ARE that happiness ts to be found. ‘The happiest of the Sons of God-—despite the sorrows that came to, Him—“had not where to lay His head,” waile His contemporary and Palitical master, Tiberius Caesar, is on record as having béen by his own _ free confession, the “most miserable of mankind.” / His palaces and piled-up millions were unable to impart the peace and §ey for which he would gladly bave exchanged his throne \% The One who had not where to lay His head said one day, @om of God is within you.” In other words, the nappin s thereof are to be found not outside of ours pogsesstons” of various sorts—but inside, in what we ARH, what we AVE y Those who looking for Heaven away off beyond the Seven Stars wm lie Muy ou the wreng track. They are fooling themselves They are listening to the teachers deceribed long ago by the Great Teaches asthe “blind leading the blind.” 4 Heaven is within, or it is nowhere. Tt is not a locality that we “go’ to® but the condition in which we find ourselves as the result of a certain why of looking at life and the world. y Mind to me a Kingdom is,” wrote one of the grand old poets. He who has the right sort of Mind ix a King, and possesses “all the recorded . bemefits of heaven and earth”, while he who bas the wrong type of Mind isyperforce a slave and @ wretch, poor and miserable, even though he shouid papcon to ve surrounded by all the gilded fopperies that riches bestow. “ Yes, our distinguished American, with characteristi¢ good sense, has me the bull’s-eye squarely. Money does not make happiness. It never did it never will. The great “end and aim” of us all !s to be reached, if it's reached at all, along some other way than that which is indleated by the dollar mark. in the course of @| “one mely but if every “The King glory of life and the true Iwes—in the “great rather than in are ! ES Betty Vincent's » Advice to Lovers M" dear girls, you who have brothers, friend’ and sweet hearts in camp somewhere in| the United States or in the field| samewhere in France, do not forget fawrite to them. Do not put off the aviters. Do pot write doleful, teary, “eh-I-am-so-unhappy” letters. Do! net write short, formal, stereotyped | Sarees ‘nm umtform tells the! game story—that the brightest spot tm the whole business of war is the letter from home. They should &* cherry, “newsy” letters, writ- “<¥ gust as you would talk !f the be- person addressed were with syn ht, mmer @ Marsal Ariiting dory is obyer 3 rma Prat The Net Begins to Cloxs On a Man Suspected of Helping The Submarines By Ben Ames Williams PSs OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, caeey 9i 4 WHY DID You MOVE HRS oun 2 WE SEEN TS HAVE LIVELY NEIGHBORS Bove us HERE Too 5 3 FELL Trig hier EVERY STEP ; nf ERE SO Noisy THEY Took THEY MADE LIFE TISERARLE For Us. [— THar's PERFecTLy agent ! We CAN'T StAno ir! Wut Catt THe JANITOR. xe Pearce ABOove ARE MAKING SUCH Rumpus, THE PLAGTER IS FALLING DOWN MAKE EN SToP! WELL | AM GOING To COMPLAIN Tao WHo ARE THEY?) WHAT'S HAPPENED MR ann MRS RouGH HOUSE AND & LoT oF LITTLE (RouGH Houses / room window. I had gone to Hobart remembered his vigil in Vben’s cottage, the mysterious sounds him through the that had come to "Watoh that light the next dime you see it acting so." he told Morse. “You'll tid fm right “T will,” the lieutenant promised. Hobart took up bis story. “Dben was away that night when the light signaled,” he sald. “I began to suspect him. Then--you've heard about the dory I picked up here? wisey Com: aa quiet Ma any) settlement, called ‘The Wen Scour sailing changed at the last moment— to baffle the submarines?” “You think—his plan i 1 think th rmans are planning , eared aman | “There was a dead man tn it—shot to gather a lot of submarines here to In these days of telephon , Winks by @ Mauser. And they sunk a sUb- harry the transports when they sall; ay cary communication the art of | tome way’ cointial wil tbe v ts Y,, marine at the mouth of the bay the and I think he ia to give them the Ietter-writing has almost become 4 | fut ‘without ‘fh any way furnishing & uu ns jcions, Hot day after." word when to strike.” Rane Ges Son, war howd do yeh | Pana ar: Heenan tna: ace (cand AEM hi is point ‘Laout. sto : suspect Scour; & ( ss, toward reviving it member that Moti” the, or : hi guia en” watched him. ‘Trailed him town Nev mipiinubiter monk: iat mot all, your letters may reach the aie during Reg thle’ nae ty a ht se er the under eos communicee oe Night. That d. we bh found a him tell t what you said--then man in whom. you are most interest | {lou uf several’ U' boats, lobster pot buoy near the monument warn the department, Have the ¢ - erse: aera mien iene there was @ ing date and port changed, Slip 4 verseas @& particularly if he is overseas | CHAPTER X MUD ie taro tan cociiace: tot a naw. tbl the > é packet of cigaret and Ho 3 n The office e brightened, “We Instead of scolding about the posta 4 Hobart th service one solution of this problem ) in there. When Morse ernment, but when they got could do that.” +} is to write more letters, many more, on Hobart left joined the others, Hob: next day the buoy was gone, Hobart rouse, avinned ia hand. "we g the probability of lis | A a anad trailed Scour the night before. can do it, We will" he suid exult thus increasing y | ie replaced L want to talk to you." went to the monument in his canoe.” antly, getting something every little while. he had found it: Livut, Morse look ain. dtutek “What do you make of" began ‘Write—and write what be will 1 iad listened for hours to the he agreed, | AD tuctave’ Ue <enaee WEAK thatt Lt CHAPTER XI. to read. sounds that came to him. Hin min a wan i Masied— inne sounds aves; 3 pot buoy irked—that ha ne 11) two allies found no 4s whirling with eonjecture and sus- \ ed it before the Government buat Doing Her Share. ws wien with conte i qe rw the Govern ce eee IED. Th) aries PE am twrenhy | PI ee eee ee early ow long have aan haat Pearl ie a a ks te | 1 - ome th}? sich OF A h ugreed, "“W ‘i man Juriog ext h years old und living at bome wi ie end hing condemned or , other. We have enough ie ca iuben went o1 # canoe a nignt ¢ tayed. au bou i money and companionsn! pit 7 ths evidence was no * der led Ain--and T saw the fash “ te needed by my mother, Yet I fe opal He gelt the necd of an u: ‘near m nent i d heard $ 7 : bp “\ go unpatriotic to be an able-bodied Marka? ‘Bentén? ‘Field?’ Ho @ port, When Scour came back there They wa iroug . . | Marks ento lela a wa bullet hole through his canoe.” — crack in h Hobart @achzr when other girls are going ; yg prema Py aer Bole EARS Sine crack In ,igte munition factories, the nursing agian them without @ do you peel Morse leaned forward, “The discover. SenCE Hones J warvice und the land army, ‘The feel. [008% CMAL Hobart at hantly, the micro cara throug ‘ ee anes T have twa| Morse? ‘The name was an inspira Morse 1 eee rnerpy es a : 4 Shanty ie Meee eealeapaer pep tag 1s intensified because ave tw : Cee ee RTA APATITE Mo 4 ear d ne but & « it and a young man whom I Hon, Hobart Ne Scour has ed & microphone tr reading tn the nean me Kut it Guanine ani y mee Ultantiy, Lieutenant Morse was th rm ee * water off here, and the Wire TUNS tO we not till the third evening that ct to marry some day in Uncle Meare mish iaecavise S0GUK Nintink of a traitor path “ala cotte Baten hear aenale un r ot t ‘ 3 fan's serv I must stay quietly is , Sor ; der water. 1 wag there last night; [ their vigil was rewarded, et home, for my mother’s sake, out ney Bim atery Aaeaha aintly pale: hy propellers, heard @ sMgnalling It was a foggy night. The wind fe there nothing 1 can do to help?" BoDart eps GOUNEYY SHAT BIEN OD ened. “Who had swung into the east at dusk, Mphere is much quict but valuable|/ue resolution: His Sn hte in *'What do you think af ben Ut. Morse leaped to his fect “I'll and from the North Atlantle bad . b the merning was toward Eben's col gooup? r him, Ho's a 6f - a ich you « > for yo ‘ swept in a great white bank of mist. werk, whi a yon cae a8 sor aay Joor was oper, and Eben ‘pg | evan miaaned Ne tiers ua erat HO 80) 7. had shrouded: the islands: scrces Ld , ul. Morse went to town wilh : Just my word. Only—('m sorry you che y itself, and ongth cloaked the nearest Red Cros workroom,| yo14 penton that inorning; and Ho- of him—when 1 told him whem the trat 4 will 4 if nas Phere you can make surgical dress-| bart chafed at his inability’to s 4" flobart told him. gail" he t tlong the Barbette in a hospital garments and knit for] the man, When Morse returned he tor , PRE lia t <4 Auahed frie ye ME waaly Seine abroMR whieh lett Grape of iss every week, You can knit ar} was at dinn An hour F Hohatt wuttled back’ in tte ohain, Comedie gree, Mie Morne. told ms gidlature. ¢ to everything it me, too. And the conservation of | Crossed © bewch to the off “Til tell you," he said, "You can Judge mouth . aiurt Ww ' 4 in Re y cer's cottage for yourself.” y le t 1 . r. [offers a splendid field for help: | “pie ieutenant and Mrs, Morne were ito told what M i aaiaS. 1a ute) \ vt f ness to the home girl rhaps|on the Marshall veranda with Anne ¢ eae ad ts tin : ‘ a4 nan anne mur work in the kitchen ean and Mra, Marshall, Hobart parentage, le itungaria a TNE y Hear assent Borvant to tako a job in a war| them, fretied, strove to manufac Are, the Night when the b oot him inyact i Ho. donned aaa, st Row, wien the ale OF & pretext on which he sixualed. Lieut, Morse inter just help me. We fae and detailed instructions published i¢ Heutenant away, In the eae rupted with a cr iii tli hikes TRAE aT AnanlT a tL abt Pa many places, there is much pre- omen began to talk so “Why, " oye alte . " A My and Lee ie ena waeala tal fener tees ce K Why-it was «doing that last nig When we've evi enough to o noir W exclusively of such feminine matters I yaw It! T didn't notice Dell. prove b —tlh ‘ you can accomplish. Don't! as knitting woolen socks for the sol. Ing boa Ap'b Ration Jk Wee meal» . prove hin whet then we ca 1 bui shat they also eave whe otay itn light within shone faintly ' through diers that the thing worked o! it bome—and work, dealt, Lieut, Morse es Tract night?" Hobart cried. “But—the transports’ them, Licut. Morse went fo: i “Yeo. -I watobed it fram my bed- “Can't you warn them—bhave the the silt $m the well, and for half an ( » A THEY ARE THOSE NEW Te WHO LEFT THe. Quo BECAUSE THe MAN Livia UNDERNEATH MADE LIFE MISERABLE (2 THE RouGu Houses U THE SAME Pe aPLe WAO LIVED ARovE US IN THE OLD Fu AT) * XN and neck — a 3 hour wateued esaly. Luen Mu- from thé cottage dnd hurried toward | Pasion Editor, The Wrening Worlds of bart Wook bis turn, tbe sbeaoh, a I have a dull oe At @ lit ttter 8 o'clock he w ie came to the breakwater and| green crepe do s iden lay down the book ue was rcad- found, ag he, expected, that Bben’s| cine dress which ing. From the | man's atutude etnde'was gone. There was no sign . it Was obvious be Was listening ty of reat) Mors The tide was out| 1 would like to re- ‘ sound that came through te and Hobart went quictly down ths| model, giving tt @ crophons. His face Was intent, his Brevel toward low water, : ro Wore puckered, and there was a. HAlp Way there the Lieutenant con | touch of contrast Hobart waiched; Hoen listengd. #gatnxt the white curtain of the fog.| was plain, with a And as the Histon Bo Haple Le gi 1: "Where is he?” | Georgette collar all drew toward bim a paper and a pénh- done ib Me CUNOE,’ cil. Af i vaw, nko » “Witch way? around the round snateb up begin Northeast.” neck. Skirt had @ write slowly. Hobart watched “The monument!" Hobart eried.| short tunic over ten aninuites ben wrote, thon Hurry! We'll follow him!” ng| Bia in. foundation, peneil became ned, iJo ran up the beach to where the 3 ‘ Was apparent jund, for penne lay and he ead Morse hyre | AM elebtecn years aid. bis und dréw pied it down to the water, Both] of age, and would " tybyvix elfiibed in, and they rowed precart-| Ike the dress for Consuitit “ oun to Uly invoring, changed trom| sunday wear. y lanl t tnd they could ered banding of Purple, gold, rood nm \ draw Any ‘hearer to the [4nd green, coking? bell and sleeves, whe 1 hand ta Hyen Hobart gave up tn the end, if and heard , He wwore. "Notting to do: but watt At) { ie ke © wali. till the | Pasion BAitor, The Dvening World: br tr age pretty Nar itt Reimers Will you please aid little cottag n n the , of my compas door, he _ utlicer and Hobart vie & becoming For Eben had left upon the tabis ® : ra oe bye the bit of paper upon which he bad ,yryt lime wi wilh” he hele ott bare mate. & been. writing - 9 cold, foi heir oll~ street dress’ Hot rept into the cottage and 18) but after a tme they dozed, vg tweet i aa f then ‘slept in drifting boat, A color and matertalt nay funders lurcd Sof “the ttle” erate 1 am forty yeare of wake Olmr e scrambied to bis ho ene age, short and stout) : low of a ship have gray » i along, na brown eyes, medium a * heh skin with good eolen: } Hi n and shook him into panel styles as I have wa i. Morsay saw three dresses on thal t glimpse of the order, Mra, Wy: ) subutarine's rh in the fog, . i Mer bow wave *WaRed mo," Ho- This design would bart, whispered be pretty in a dark! Did they seo uattt L gon’t. think, so," We I they aid, they'll ea back f buutis r Remember that fisher- ot ‘ . obvious ning in. his yart whirled and eaught the A STORY OF GERMAN RAIDERS OFF THE COAST _ a PRIVATE PEA rT microphone; and his heart leaped, and Miss M. W, then he curs the luck that had Use plain self. made him miss secing the signaling tin for trimming * gat This Is the One Big Story of the War It Begins Next Monday ~— ht of triumph in them eyes, ben had received orders to « report at once to som, ‘had eet out to do ao. Original Fashion Design For The Evening World’s Home Dressmakers By Mildred Lodewick 1018 by The Prose Publishing Co. (The New York Bvening "Practical Autumn Coat for a Child. have ¢ passed }- ! thetr first month at school, and the jight weight frocks that the 4 younger ones wear mist be suitably edvered’ for the cool weather naw ypon us, An economical talent will’ necessar- | ily be exploited in | this direction, for every patriotte household {a + plam- just ‘how Uttle can get algng the, next six in, order, to ther | Linerty! Expecially children aré in the family is the effort strong to ‘save, and the mother he ho can sew will intl a great oppor- jtantty io the making fo hor children's lothes. A coat is usually congidered [the hagdest thing to tagkle, but in reality it ty It is as cady't ‘abt tasier to together that’ a frock, but there are more pieces to banda. on account of the Jigjng and ippop lining, | » little design ning | they ang buy bond. where FoR THEN By COMPLAINING? {Au THe Tie pikeasana put CHEER uP | IT Witt Be” coat Tf a here t simple and senart, with no yokes or plaita fo bother, It is lighttty flaring un- f Ane arms, and ae bgttom is fin- with a deep "attached | in | tu th effect aoe edie coat ake THIS SIMPLE AND DISTINCTIVE DESIGN ponkets aro. 80- MAY BE EASILY COPIED. ceujgd under ait, soe that only the Kiddy herself knows)tion kerami fur clotn may be ome whepe to thrust he tne gweves | ployed instead. which are full at the base have the ° nh uttached with a tack one on the coat, Nar- cuffs finish them at the At the neck a band of fur haye SA Gbavadnad Answers to Quertes, Fashion Katitor, The Evening World: f ) \ bo you think ti.” fur wrists. forms a bigh coMar and staré@ng at the shoulder continues ‘ina straight line down the side-front to tneet the row seas closed material—eiflx deep band at the bottom and woolen semis Squicrel or beaver are youthful furs transparent matertad ’ i effective for trimming, or an tmita- in odd shado of ret—- ! , would make up Inte @ pretty dress? It wai!’ given to me and’ would appreciate your? suggestions, 1 ata't twenty-three years of? ‘ age, five feot three inches tall. I am very ¢ ‘ond of the Eton style ., having found it very becoming. Could thie dress have a suggus |! | tion of It? ‘ bandh baa, you can- not mate! material itselt Georgette un ing color, Watst frantin d ith’ suddenty, a black figure large rowboat, and {pe tn the direction Hobrl was row- cant eantion tosthe wind Libis efforts to spe: ter t two inen realined thelr sound na great dis y could not be Miss J, Sleeves and tunic may be of self-col- or Georgette, Band of satin may weight tunic. Girdle thes in bow and ends at back, Embret@e:! snd began Lo row desperately, superior and, bilndly. bart lipped > (oe Bs Continued) )

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