The evening world. Newspaper, January 23, 1919, Page 16

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A \ \\\ AI AK \\\ “i \\ \Y\ — \\\ \\\ \\\ re ‘es ~ 4) ip \\ \ THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1919 Three Sterling Maxims, for Matrimony | st ; | For the Girl Who Work ' . i es | ———- a 2c Se NS AT EST W RITERS NO. 11. “IF YOU CANNOT BE JEALOL 66, 99 | REE RRS > yy, any ; o “ AS YOU CAN.” a= | ‘A Woman,” Says One Big Magazine Edilor, “Hi By Nixola Greeley Smith Greater Powers of Visualization Than a Man-- Sarciest GMa PRUURIRH Onl. Vila Hin Yeok Svenlna wend). . | See See SIT : Every Woman Possessing Imagination Is Not a et we have been told often, is the serpent in Love's Garden of Woven Ay Genius, but One Who Has Inherited This Divi ne eden. sut what would the Garden of Eden have been like without “ : a) iy, nition, a urels.” the serpent? The original headquarters of the Anti-Saloon League, Gift Is in a Fair W ay to Achieve the Lat perhaps. * While & chronically Jealous mate may sound all the notor vetween ye ep roe By Charlotte Wharton Ayers voredom and acute torture, the dictates of the most "i Reorgtag teed i Ae ae rs AaEe dcthe 40000 OF 10,000 manuscrigtl ordinary conjugal courtesy require ha a polite wift a A: tPOREe 2 A ie through whose hands pass som . 4 a ; H hav even when she cannot feel it, shall simulate from time \ AN BRR ry rH & year, 60 per cent. of which are wr sit rine a ae inal ailel to time a certain concern about ier husband's fascina- | W. i ee ee ee rie up ot @ tions for other members of her own sex 5 D (@ @ Ee " point of view and what constituents are quired in the noe H a For the dearest tradition of man, from Iceland to! [ SS — ~ val ~ eh we eaihide tte Me ic ay eal yee ¥ onia, 1s now and always will be that of his Infi-| Wenn a's's SS SHR * staat Davis te bis friends—had this to say on “s yan | a = subject Every woman knows and admires scores—even hun-| Marconi Predicts Electrical Wizards Will Soon Find a Way lo Send Mensayes to Planets by “Twenty years ago it was an casy matter to tLe dreds—of perfectly goodghusbands to whom 14060 Ether Wave Other Scientists Have Suggested Various Means, Here Described, of Com- ehaiy pel Catal ie oh Seek ey 7 wil > stancy never suggests itself even as a ug! Bui 5 . rs Th. Tes . . whether a story was written by a man or a Rvisuavebent ‘ihe Would HUMUAIN JUAT a6 long about pralstine euch a municating With Mars. It Has Been Thought Mars Already Has Tried to Communicate Life was viewed through the muasculide and ihe Cem husband for virtue as about taxing @ woman with its tack, For there is} With the Earth. ve and the sex es the bad was freque nad No man so good that he does not Ike | ite A sve ! 7 Al > 7” been suggested b: Robert W. pressed in the theme, Women who wr wrote pure! to be suspected. If any one doubts | Possible result could compensat tor | Marguerite Movers Marshalt How They d Talk to Mars Wood of Johns Hopkins University. “A from the feminine standpoint and saw life from t this assertion, let investigate it) Personal rudity, But erndity fa j Vio New York 4 Worl oe ' r ick sp n the white alkali A 4 vantage or disadvantage point of wife, mother or sweet J seientifically. Let hin take the most /Oftener than subtlety wins men, and HALL we be able to talk wi pointed out, “could t avers” NS heart. The impression med to exist that when Bore: man he knows and observe him jone of ite most acceptable munifosta Mars or other tx in t much Jews expense th woman took her pen in hand she must remember that she was ee | 720 be Wi love with « person who inf a tne ne alt HEMEL Cult bell Ed feel only feminine thoughts. Men, ; He » have monope Fi f Bigh Do more, ladies. sigh no more; | HO! irecan eee ee el vege hia aye lof the red-t ae nen ; a iy a| somehow or other manages to main- | Bin were dooeivers ever, as about like being taken to dine in a} would lg as easy to twink’ Lf ce | cate earth iehase Pet One foot on sea and one on shore, |tearoom, Unlike a woman, his critteal | Xt achieve th the bial Ce Wt ee eee riia: os van | _Uwaked: Stes Davis What é To one thing constant nover! faci are aot diverted from the ° equaj size bly ea SENG! VE Tw HILGe WIG! Wider | HERE HOULINICS. 160 WOR n ; If the man's eye does not brighten, | Dill of fare by the fancy fringes on | ‘ ibe WEAN TA emR eee Tr . sccatics ah ad WRCSERN & bic RE i and if there is not a demonstrable |the walls, the artistic candlesticka ° Ack arrange to rol! and in terms of brutal finality; oat sain » that {s requ \ difference between his chest measure- | and the nial china, and he know cylinders, exposing the Which was pure unvarnished ROT!) Without i ment before and after hearing the | all the time that the od lacks flavor Mj ound unde th, the cyline W 1 novels for ladies and ment e as pes haa 1 and that there is not enough of it H 1 neously , Men, t ntlemen; we had | de th & He Hi It is not always casy for the tru i peu practical and s ey a ! modern wife to be jealous, tel bias ty f f I dee 0° me For one woman who has con rh magicians as just jet z bs fided doubts of her husband I know u communt “” wind ‘ nied |ten who express on all occasions volu quite possible a lips of weet creature NAA wee ble belief in his fidelity, “Whatever | for the elec tists of the fu ) is Said to hold j blending y with a home | *sination : Mr. Davis with a « A woman asserts publicly ture. He thinks that universal fedora: for. the: dls uence leonora. in secret,” a feminine cynic lence of mathematics will be uti Mr. Davia appeared to be very much LOU bL famous song, I will admit that T know |to mo after we had listened to s a sort of Interplanetary E Pores lout of conceit with that period eee coe absolutely nothing about the psychol- declaration, but my own transmitted t ” F 8 “When did the change take place ogy of the susceptible rex—an awful | does not go so far t travel on for " ae ab ls meth ng very alluri Feiou { admission for any woman to be com-| | pelieve merely that in a complete: | y receiving © sig Prof. W. H. Pickering of Harvard suggests a mirror to reflect sun's |, > Hasina Ue tone “Hor tho better?” ho inquired. “OM! oo oo. to te concratulated, It Belled to make, ly happy household no wife should }nals which secen to come out of th rays. Flammarion advices this plan be used with electric light at night. (nals by means of long and short} say when the women began to be! vcore of great eatinfaction to f + Jealousy is to-day the most UN-| deprive her husband of the joy of de- | infinite ovean of space in which this pe kin ave fa more weitere fot Merely ¢ WAS THEE SRL tater aba h fashionable of the passions. nying from time to time a casual im- | earth of ours revolves. festa Be benavon ites there | shouldn't a woman have as broad and| «y. ae hits a It Is indeed part of the cult of fem- i Siieation that he is pursued by enam- of establishing a re intelligent by re, than sig- | comprehensive a view of life as a man? ative a lon uib te yvthgdletnah eaibet ored women. Surely the occasional HO ESOT TO Rey nals flashed from mirrors ting was a profession at one| the high Meee oidual aie “No sensible woman Is Jealous of Mer |manifestation of moderate jealousy Is | mo of seience's most fa Banteuie method of getting time monopolized by the male. It was | preadion ee ri husband,” men solemnly assure us, speculations. And, for all Fee ee ee ae ee ery Gant far omen Leal } i He having derived this information from Ke D JEALOUSY. INTHE | we know to the contrary, Mars has GARDEN OF EDEN Je that they should lear: the source of all masculine wisdom <— ~ P, Todd, of Amherst, | but un n working to establish a “Hello, . c » Stu about women—their own wives, For wartal” line. Certainly i¢ the Red d has made many valuable | 't astronomical observations by going! in the t not being jealous is one of the n Planct, named for the war god, lives peated tna an eens Uy ASM poses among us, a regrettable pose, 1 | up to ity name, it should be especially ee; ied, Si aapeiere tae ie j think, since it deprives so many men . ager to establish communications pee at RY. Rosey ice dediehe: of the innocent thrill of being sus: | é S) just now and be posted on poison gas, 1 a eel Fas get ca Um pected, Moreover, it gives women ler submarines and the other moder im- uy See Cieae tc usta | eS epee Lasse N4 resolutely modern an indisput Jone of the most agreeable amenities | provements rif from the possible inhabitants of the! mind, but v sho neta he } th at di Advantage. I lunched the other day | of civilized riage he man who} In 1% af months before the MER aNG EPA Gtee GRMUA ice ee a ' with a husband and wife. jdees not practise it is a boor, the; war opened, a distingu i astron tion, however, has been made pub- eaaalily there is some- # we were waiting for you,” |woman who omits it from her reper- ) omer, Le Coutre of neva, pal yi thers eine: the young woman, “a girl tory a prig. rived at the conclusion that in a i a i us three or four times and | Moreover, all persons possessed by | habitants of Mars were signalling th Si the p Sh A clear-sightod i she stared at my husband terribly, L}any feeling worthy the namo of love earth, During observations whieh | Uncen HE ve " bi wanted to hit her with a beer bottle” | feel jealousy. Voluptuaries do not, | lasted seventeen days, he remarked Tha ry ne ty | foibles, failings wod her) tora, ane: ¢ Bb tiny : (ihe classic weapon, | understand,| But they are the Bolshevik! of the |@ series of luminou Hons of exvablished, It ‘ ers. |the best indication of the lure of since “The Lure” went on the road |emotional world and, being bankrup;! bluish whit era an bes nent os) sag. o0 or nares that [letters for the a fat ome yeirs ago). Involuntarily ‘lof sentime elve a onds and occurring on several differ : ul Lowel -|imagination never transcended ex- asker D Ww he receive Paced yader ihe ee Meee sha es Bi cen a ay ae He compared them to P bh pene w Wood f Johns Hopkins suggests constructing a clared that observatior ated the pe nc That was woman | the girl th was taking it. He bloomed, expandel, | she finds it impossible to be jealous, | light : 9 L osphere of M ind theres | powers of visualization than man; a ! grew radiant under this far from sub | She may marry him, of ‘or any | ‘The noted French astronomer, Ca- fore i tle flattery, though he is a middie- |one of the thousand res by which ymille Flammarion, and Prof, W. H ‘ agod writer of musical criticism, And | women persuade themselves to Pickering of Harvard, both have ¢ between t be Prof. Pick- Jared that communicat us and the Martians m lished by ght signal I realized then, as often before, the |the step for which « mistake so muny of us make in try-/ig adequate, Hut whatever her 1 ing not to be crude, subduing our |tive may have been, ly one re Natural History. “The low atmos-| NEW YORK WAR BABIES * r possibility of “life as welcondition that frequently leads her Lory t do yor th i \/ know 12" into fantastic conclusions and out of | thay can't stand tha trite thes haute d truct of| the tranquil waters of reality, but she | stand success (| Martians is that of 3} Sdnond | — ——___—___— — = wat Perrier of the French Museum of ;: " . ; 14 ettects, indeed, as if we were planning |requires that she shall express at leag |¢fng suesested that a mirror turned pheri¢ has produced a con-|Who Will Have to Be Introduced to Their Father f them for other women instead of for a polite concern about his fatal fay. | 00 a axis toward Mars be used f pme f the pulmo- i the simple, credulous children that the cination, even if she is unable to fee! | Teflecting the rays of the sun, red.! [ i best men are. any. So if you cannot be jealous, pe} “t think a 1 better way of put- ‘ roa Te many women—indeed to me—no | as jealous as you cai ting a system of mighty refleotors in | SateHt oO x - practice, commente M. + East slight UV RN rq , 1s marion, “would be by electr plone is er ; with perhaps le ywer- EVENING WORLD PUZZLES reflectors at might, as the luminow ay tii they have somB ot thel By Sam Loyd. irk aurfaco of the earth would b tee In Meas aineviag HOW MANY FIGHTERS IN THIS FLOCK? geen much more easily an & larg Their laren eves) a 7 | flected light intense enough in. itself, (blue), t rong noses, their large 4 but neutralized to a certain cxtent a type of beauty | by the bright surface ef the sunlight 98 would not appre-| earth suggesting super- | “In either se the signals could Saat a rtainly be seen by the Martians, Pate fee Jy provided they possess instrument 9 Me anensaieg| | und other means of perception equiv Dr. William R. Brooks of Hobart would employ a large area of RA ALLEN ase Honraat in ail the| alent to our telescopes, The expert electric lights which could all be turned on or off at once for signalling. iknate: Manua the nen thaltwall \ meh nent hectried 1h, O0y (PAE AT| oid ben comparnilyaly. eaey, inate (dred genre lave asipinamora:atudiea | xe ajways offering conditions of | ‘ the world Supposing the te M er sly that it may be! poorer v bility The next near! | were seen and answered, the rest nines oe 5 ronu nts| Opposition" of Mars—its nearest ap- | ETURNED doughboys are codnted five straight rows with four|” pei pee tice aati eeahangad't! ere t 1 f the earth M 1 to us| Pp 1 to the earth—wiil occur in| i STAM] would be just the Mor-planetary fe ¢ t f f frat rate puasie matoria f the six bombers as we first saw) telegraphic ‘Are you there Once * i r W nxt \ I fe of \ con mn, RON BSF Fyanat ENRIE TT ij example, bere is a story ast m, and L thought it might make a[cosanunieation catkent ' ne \ planet was) so we may ¢ the scientiats, dur AR S \Gi7 B may. ore a member of the old vth wood puazie to figure out the rewest | vention ea ae ER aitek ee h W know i t ng the next few to we ud Private Meyer Brenner's boat had been delayed one day in saile “We were watching six Iafayet:| possible number of Spads that could | minsion, it EE as ; ee bed ed t : CLL ye | ing from New York for France he would not need an introduction Escadrille flyers as they went o¥er] have joined them to make good that | 7 . to his son, who is portrayed here on a warm, woolly bear skin the German lines on a bombing tip | Buddy's statement about five w | } Private Brenner sailed March 2, 1917, and neat day the welcome and wondering what had become of | with r to a fow | h e R O m a n ¢ i) Oo f W re) r d S little guest arrived at the Brenner home at No, 145 Second Avenue ays oe Rae hata bree pusais? ; ie: i eaniashosnle . : Tho oe tr ri f In the ten months that have passed since then Mrs, Sylvia Brenner, Meee iiont Ih ihe dermetion - How Every Day Expressions Had Their Origin : hese eevee pee \ tolin our own, wore accustomui i*| Private Brenner's wife, has told little Aaron all ubout his father and : Afterward we could not agree on how PAT ANSWERS PHONE By James C. Young K what these four letters me mooth over what he was doing for the people acrovs the ocean, so Aaron may not : many planes made up the entire P* Pe AIRE 278s WAR MORK _ poe ain Gua thes Seber Ne AEN \ 1 ge f 1. | duct, or tot be such a stranger to his father as it might seem. Private Brenner ts flock, but one fellow claimed that he ey a ees i ad ia) wane! ; ; edi hei b : : ‘ Q-u-i-w | row with the 205th Company, 103d Battalion, at Tours or the ware cM ome egrirty im Rleeeea \ yu lestion of the] other ' The baby that is looking so intently from the chair is Henricttes Answer to ‘A Puzzling Courtship."' | Vhe teley vigorously Apes ii ; ; Ana nained ver} damaged places Ross, who Was born just five days after her father sailed, Her father On Sunday, the first day of the : ust decided | OM Are oy ; ward ban | ory | tin r of qui But this of ¢ Henry Roos, 1st Company, M. P,, 3d Army Corps, and her mother week Danny received Kate's promise | over to in town the| \ nted 3 new word 4 \ aather pileak ae a is Mrs. Rose Tioss, who lives at No. 60 George Street, Kvergreen, L, 1, to marry him “when the week after! receiver, und put to the| min eile : pie aaa lee ea Xpression that Private Ross sailed May 1, 1918, and Miss Henrietice put In her aye next is the week before last.” There.‘ Tau en others) pine picture " pu Hn vas] Wh 1 urs sine | fUrn vie Ae ue ees ‘ae pearance May 6 fore she will marry Danny in twenty.) “Hilo!” he ca Assurediy no term ever had af nd he mu vin the| wo Fes ; AAs ear cle fl | The Evening World will be pleased to print pictures of other Smt aye atter her promise, Had) Hollai” unswelwd the voice at the! stranger origin thar mart, £04 e om ; ' | still used to-day inn the same| New York babies whose fathers went to France too soon to meet “ she promised a day earlier, then on| other end of the line his eighte| etter word “quiz,” one which is ¢ man Ped wee unk |inanner as by ‘the old Romans, for! them when they were born. Send photographs and brief particules i Sunday, twenty-two days tater, ner} “Aw, g'wan! Phwat d’ ye tink Off Pecntily fi . wiitine SEe ree meter eee Sry implies the very thing ‘hat! |) 144 was Baby Edilor, New York Bvening World : promise would have fallen duc. am—s bub vai?’ ) Fiaiviove Blar.| ers Quiz came as every erie ly @ term in the Roman furniture’ it Meant 4,000 years aoc, | F ~ ‘ : ‘ ro ai SR HRN TA i eR lt hI nl ea ts sanemameethaane nme

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