The evening world. Newspaper, February 12, 1919, Page 14

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ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, Peles Daily Except sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to 63 ‘ik Row, New York. ‘a RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SHAW, Troasurer, 63 Park Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Associated Prem ig exctisively entitied to the 1 EDITORIAL PAGE Wednesday, February 12, 1919 _ i Coprrrigtit, 1010, by The Teme (ling C9 (Tae New York Evening World.) — Nts By J. H.Ca | rs | | Copyright, 1019, by Tho Pees Publish: Reflections By Helen Rowland Ing Co, (The New York By the Modern al of ay ¥, fy Send eT ee ase Tieewlas credited’ AS" Unis paper ond cleo tle’ local ‘mews publet Some Side-Lighis on Her Opinions of YOLUME 5: Man and Why He Falls Short or Comes Up to the Exacting Standards of Matrimony. * | MODERN hy ma; er Ph. D., but her FEBRUARY 12, 1919. | AX. mace ceuieste eer @ he “ ND then there will be some black men who can A man's senha something l!ke @ good muff, Both ff 5 . remember that with silent tongue and clenched of them have that remarkabie facility f pringing ~ He teeth and steady eye and with well-poised bayonet ack into shape again, no matter bow badly nor how they have helped mankind on to this great consummation.” That was written fifty-five years ago by the best and biggest | friend the colored man ever had. To-day New York welcomes more arriving battalions of the 369th United States Infantry—the famous | colored 15th New York, commanded by Col. “Bill” Hayward—| Bringing one of the finest collections of Distinguished Service often they may b A woman is love bright and g' only interest in pears to be in starting be “crushed.” always supposed to keep the flame of lowing and to supply the fuel. A man's a fire—bon, grate or sentimental—ap hho . There is no more charming lover than a man who © Grosses, French War Crosses and citations for bravery that any regi- | mean eomiane” 19 8 shy that he can sit quietly and appear to be inter- B fment of the A. E. F. can show. “Hell fighters,” the French called ested while a woman talks about herself. He is such a sw SWEET sur- them. New York is proud of these colored soldiers—proud as would | have been the greatest of their friends could he have foreseen their | gallant part in helping mankind on to another hard won con- summation. Many of them will see the United States once more on his birth- prise! Alas, the high cost of tires and gascline has made it almost impossible for a poor, lonely bachelor to afford a wife nowadays, after he has paid his | garage bills. Never again shall we be able to | ern man’s kiss and a ‘jorthern man’s kis say, “The difference between @ South- ii i i 18 merely the difference between , Gay, Reaching forward fifty years and further, words of his are |the aroma of mint and the aroma of cloves!” Goodby, itt eplzram! oa ; here to greet them, | have no place in a dry, dry world! ; es | Nation’ 0 i e } | Usually there are just two kinds of women tn the world—the kind you ‘ » "hater Ee ‘sa bee haat beh set peristind a married and the kind you SHOULD have married. The first is merely the é simplicity and carrying power of Lincoln's wisdom comes through | “innocent bystander” who happened to come along when you were trying te other men and matters of to-day. | es aaokine dedun hv: wacoeld: r Let jabor turn from its triumphs and temptations and listen: | ; “The strongest bond of human sympathy, outside of the ein would be a lot happier if it were less of an idea! and more of N family relation, should be the one uniting all working people. @ square deal. ' r of all nations, and tongues and kindreds, Nor should this lead | No doubt, Reno considers that she has done HER bit toward making the world safe for matrimony! . to @ war upon property, or the owners of property. Property is the fruit of labor; property is desirable; is @ positive good 1 in the world. That some should be rich shows that others may become rich, and hence {s just encouragement to industry ‘ and enterprise. ¢ “Let not him who Is houseless pull down the house of another, but let him work dilizently and bulld one for him- self, thus by example assuring that his own shall be safe from violence when built.” —To a Committee of New York Workingmen, March 24, 1864. “I am always for the man who wishes to work.” Endorsement of Application for Employment, Aug. 15, 1864. | ia By The Evening World's Authority on Successful Sa! Copstisht, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Even:1g World) Mr, Griffith's sulesmanship column is published daily Justructive articles like to-day's alternate with answers to questions which salesmen | readers of The Evening World are invited to ask Mr. Griffith by letter, | Address him care of this newspaper. He is not interested in the size of Overcoming Inertia. | \04. qrm’s tactory or in the stato of PON consulting the dictionary, I! your personal finances, or in any- find that inertia is described 48| thing else except in knowing Bow being “that property of matter| your goods will bencfit HIM by virtue of which it persists in its/ Follows, then, the cardinal principle “I am not ashamed to confess that twenty-five years ago I was a hired laborer mauling rails, at work on a flatboat— ‘ Just what might happen to any poor man's son. I want every man to have the chance in which he can better his condition— when he may look forward and hope to be a hired laborer this ‘ year and the next, work for himself afterward, and finally to ¢ Sire men to work for him. That is the true system.” —Speech at New Haven, Conn., March 6, 1860. | 7 5 p prvi resreee te a ras The Jarr Family |Why Old Maids Stimulat 2 ————— ee ee ee Can the following be half a century and more old? “The world has never had a good de‘inition of the word ‘ es less somo anda ; ; Terty, and the American people, just now, are much in want e state of uniform rest—ur upon which depends all salesmanship. i ; A | force changes that state.” You must present for a prospect's of one. We all declare for liberty; but in using the same By Roy I . McCardell Matrimony That's the best definition of the/consideration goods which fit bis : word we do not all mean the same thing. With some the Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Ce. (The New York Evening World), state of a buyer's mind when first | need, | © Nord liberty may mean for each man to do as he pleaseswith | "he Perils of Palm Beach Daunt Mr. Jarr as a Moral By Fay Stevenson approached by a salesman that I| ‘The final test for all merchandise— . », Rimself and the product of his labor; while with others the | Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The same word may mean for some men to do as they please with | Married Man. other men and the product of other men's labor. jew York Evening World). |bave ever heard or read, the acid test which determines their Who Wants to Be an “Aunt Emma” and Left Alone| "isbt off the bat, nobody ever)appeal to the buyer—is whether or ” jay after day without hearing that | jnertia—a state of uniform rest Here are l66y JERE'S a letter from Cora/‘Well, you WOULD marry me!’ ” : rete jwants to buy anything. They must) not they fill a need. If your gooda two, not only different, but incompatible things called by the HIciobi egid Mite Taeriase |(seLEe Gant haces hear alearsat mad | in the World. be persuaded and convinced of the/ fill no actual need that you can dis- } 4 same name, Hberty. And it follows that each of the things is, | ing over the morning mail|Clara Mudridge become Mrs. Jack [[¥VERYTHING has its place in this re is no one to tell her the big |value—to them—of the merchandise|cover after a careful scrutiny and 4 by ok: tan bastisas Postion: celled ty Gre oltteren® cos rece lat the morning meal, “Ghe'a having lmliver (hough? asked bar. Tart “And E world, Nothing is lost. Don't|news, no one to cheer her up when | peing offered. Herein lies the art of analysis, you bad best sell something patible names—liberty and tyranny.” @ glorious time in Palm Beach. The] Jack will know how to manage Cora look upon the old maid as 2 /ahe feels’ bite, no one to even make |the salesman, When you approach 6 | else {place {8 full of bachelors, oF married | Hickett.” problem, a waster of time, an un-|her “hopping mad.” Think of living | prospect, his mind is in « state of| It may be well, in this connection, -s h peech in Baltimore, April 18, 1864. |men pretending they are, She hates) “Well,” said Mrs, Jarr, “since Cora) Beeded article, She plays a larger —as| to add tRat in salesmanship, a “need” | “The Jefferson Party was formed upon its supposed supe- |to come home, she says, and she/has been in Palm Beach Jack Silver|‘0l¢ than you give her credit for. She | sey in the latch, that call, Think of | regards the proposition you are pre-/and a “desire” aro very closely re- | Yior devotion to the personal rights of men. * * © |wants to go to New Orleans for the|acts like a crazy man, Raves about |!* @§ Important in the love world as|the joy of meeting your better half | senting, The force of your sales ar-|lated, I may need a shirt A $2 is “But, soberly, it 1s now no child’s play to save the prine |Races, but has to come home. She; women being shallow and unfaithful Hirer uplid himself, Much as she may | orim ~ Sf idnem Joanne Soe poi Jgument and tc and suggestion| shirt would serve my purpose. But ciples of Jefferson from total overthrow in this Nation, One |says we must be SURE to meet her." |and all that sort of thing. But that co. Bae ane at matrimony, and FO ee ee ee coe ta talks Seu"and {must be exerted to change that state. | perhaps I desire @ $6 one, If I eam would state with great confidence that he could convince any |, “What's that she say about the! reminds me, do you think we could go/Ner eyebro aw n that perfectly evi. (et tora pully good. dinner, ‘No | In this old world of ours, we must afford the $6 one, then my aced and ' sene child that the simpler propositions of Euclid bachelors in Palm Beach?” asked Me. |to Palm Beach? Cora writes that Fé Pression of “I'm mighty glad 1 ji(tle cup of tea for him! lake human nature as it e—not as It| my desire are, to all intents and pure : conyhectatavadies Suclid are true; Jarr. “Why, she's ongaged to Jack |love it, If you make that extra money |"ever married” sho is love's greatest », you see, the law of compensation | “** t should be, So it is] poses, one and the same thin, evertheless he would fail utterly with one who should you-are expecting to make, we could|#timulant, Babbling brooks and Never fails, The old maid may not |might be oF as it sl . rel | deny the definitions and axioms. The principles of Jefferso: tesa bin thane “4 golden sunseta never inspire a gir!| Want to have anything to do with | necessary to state what ma) be an| If you can twist your selling talk are the definitions and axioms of f a ake a trip there. - matrimony, but in her very desire tc | unpleasant fact. Human beings are|around to appeal to your prospect's } Tee society. And yet they are pretending she was married and her| “We will NOT!” said Mr. Jerr de-|t® Marry half as much as this lone, push it aside from her life, she boost hy sh, No use beating|destre for health or physical well- H denied and evaded, with no small show of success.”" husband is in France—and ghe's been | claively. Jorn woman. it on for others, One old maid may jensentiaily sullin. So ise 7 ue. being, his desire to make o j letter to Jefferson Dinner Committee of Boston, Mass. having the GRANDEST time!” said] ‘I don't see why,” ventured Mrs,| What girl can help thinking, “Shall inspire twenty roe Rie ang, eran’ us ae ae bef 1 mainly in money or his, pereeneoe! oe ‘ April 6, 1859. vite Mra, Jarr. “That's the reason she's|Jarr, “Cora is SO anxious to give|I ever come to this? Shall I wander fase, And one olf mall may nets dbs ‘ nat way, and bodily comfort for Sige om empemtcenteneninnnies ‘having such a good time. All bachel-|mo a nice time, any time I'm there | bout aimlessly without an anchor or wom eart! » you have the proper an; 1 7 “ or are afraid of single girls as though|when she's there. If you can't go] PUTpose if I continually spurn wed- pci E TLS a ala + he prope: ele of ape 4 4 ‘Human nature will not change. In any future groat ‘eney were scorpions, But with young |Clara Mudridge-Smith says she'd love| lock?” And if she is inclined to keep ib i , ' ; national trial, compared with the men of this, we shall have and pretty married women=oh, dear |to run down there with me.” poor little Johnny Doe tarrying for | he oma nec € Oo ras _ Sindy Sas mental procensen 4s: ye | 4 as weak and as strong, as silly and as wise, as bad and eo mo, how gallant they are!” “Look here,” sald Mr. Jarr, “If| her answer what world-wise mother Rqernapae ae out what they are ' <i good. Let us, therefore, study the inc . “And do you mean to tell me that|you could see the way her husband,| will not whisper, “Very well, do you C. Young ing about. How can you ‘do ‘ incidents of this as y , do you y James this? One good way is t m 1 i Philosophy to learn wisdom from, . ry ” Cora Hickett is calling herself a mar- | my boss, glares at me, right after his| wish to be left alone in the world like mt E D E. essio. Had Their Origin at po 6 : 4 jo make a 9, Jed woman and wearing a wedding |eves rest on the picture of his wife| poor Aunt Emr | ‘ow Ever: jay Expre ns stud yourself, You are not so ' aie : —Nov. 10, 1864, ng at Palm Beach aie ae you Pe know re n ie voit we | ey ean fe a oda es.) Worked mutual havoc on the whip-|much different than other people. ¢ atience, human charity ¢ rialiinanea His ‘ ? Sanaa a Uae SIRS ho wants to be like é sing of both, Among the Saracens|Make your selling talk co: } gat rity and intelligence must keep up the vampire |bad. He looks at me as though he D Ritarenay auarucat etarcnsiits pecially rich, It abounds in| Ping of both Among the Birevene line Braue sella talk conform to etrugg. sistency and wrongheade | ell, don’ ell you a lot of mar- |hated me enough to present me with : ords having unique origins. a | a i ' le with inconsistency and wrongheadedness “Weil, don't ¥ tell lot of hated : ft send any young girl trippingwown the words having i ford ‘ince. ‘The modern Turks and | ss PONS WG Mab ADRESS 9 FAM { ried men are there pretending to be!» ready-made pattern, plated silver] aide to a wedding march. At the mere | A!! Of Us are familiar with the good tor pris re sade + [nee you are a fair sample of bu- single? replied Mrs, Jarr, “And what |loving-cup. And if you sheuld go to]. gets be ‘ *lold name schooner. Mention of it; Atabs have chan his to emir. |manity at large. Get over on the ‘* Le tters From the Peo ple [is sauce for the goose is sauce for|Taim Beach with her—good night for menee o fascahh i iain & ed mmediately calla to mind a full-| But in the old times am Jother side of the fence. Ask your- ere ution of Milk Troubles. | costed as pander!" mart ca ee h her hair arranged r Pe » sea; Was the Saracens’ nam D | se "What arguments id oe } $a basis for disc neg (the wander n teeny Seal . o rigged ship skidding across the sea. |“ | would cause. Be Pete ot To Erening World not pretend to work bteretge) does‘ “iBut this seems to be a case of| ‘Mr. Smith should be very nice to| 1s 9% her figure pinched into neat.| .na that is precisely what the name | Commander of a fleet—prince of Mi to buy the ae Aiscussion about the price of |of the problem, but 4 details ooh. - fr tight-fitting clothes, and, above all, . 7 °. , ete tet ; q J m, but only to suggest |chicken and—well I was going to say | vou,” remarked Mrs. Jarr, “He met| |) 1 nplies, It was first used in 1713 at 5° The only way you can overcome 1 even the Producer and tne ee Tee ret ay What seems to be a few other birds,” ventured Mr. Jarr. |his wife through you.” that terribly worried look of world | Gloucester, Mass., and came from an| Probably very few fol! nertia m Gstributer during the past month, employed han the one now Well, when Cora Hickett is mar-| “I think that's what he's sore|!® Rot what it should be Cup!!| expression common among Yankee; race track ever have consider Ard your good, ¥ hi aud the “Agures quoted showing it| ‘The idea is to have the distribution {Med to Jack Silver she won't run|about," was the reply, “Do you know,|™4¥ beckon and call in his softest) sailor men that a fast ship “scooned” | origin of “jockey.” It Where HK will benetit, Merely telling - rag ee much to distribute | of milk in Inrge cities like New York around that way," remarked Mrg,|T believe he'd fire me, only he is aol tones but his charms are as nauht|the waves. Soon the word scooner| Words which w > Iniin that pour goads aro the bess ae watts joes to produce it, causes | rile ret owned) ‘by the mu- \Jarr as though that settled every-| suspicious that he won't let me go, compared to Aunt Emma's dilémma.| was applied to all vessels of a certain) larly descriptive, u the market ts not a ve at nelle @Be to wonder if some more economi- | 7), hd y to be divided into | thin heeause he fe it's safer to have his| A girl might resist love's persuasive De, d the usage of time led | our heads over their derivé FES ey tide’ meth }zones arranged so to minke cree HR is type, and re me added Jing argum That | s varie method of distribution than the | the ficient receiving and dis. | “She better start behavine now, as|¢ye on me, Say, ain't I in a nice voice, but at the thought of develop-|‘n' to the name, giving us schooner. | the north of England, where the let-| tion of a won reason, "Mecause,"* geet Cannot be devised. Obviously | tributing and the business in each an engeged girl, J think,” sald Mr,|mess? That old man belleves I'm aj ing into s pocket edition of Aunt Em-| Everybody has read Kipling’s| ter “ta” is pronounced with an ex-| Pick your goods to pieces, Mind out high cost of distributing 1s prin- | ft to be controlled by one, dis- | Jarr virtuously. regular Don Juan, when I'm as inno-| ma marriage looks like the most di-|‘Abaft the Funnel.” It was one of | tremely broad accent, the name Jack |.) BP gs ect should purchase, pally due to the following causes, if] “The gale of milk would be mado| “Then there Is such a thing as be- |cent as a lamb, vine thing on earth. The one grea:|the books which firet’ won him|has the sound of “Jawek." And just} | SO “20 tell bane eeitlehes scoounts of the situation|only on a cash basis to consur ing an old man’s darling and there is| “Well, so much the better," said| chance! |tame. ‘This word “abaft" has « most | as we call every Chinaman Joba, so ECONOMY. fet—The ineMcient manner of | where fees enon t, debts, except |aleo auch @ thing as being @ young|Mra Jarr complacently, “It's all the! Nor does the spinater’s atimulative | interesting history, and is mot with| the North Engllshma called OTHER had sctticd down’ to ring the product, due to the|desires an account oe customer | man's slave,” ropl Mrs, Jarr, easier for Clara that he's jealous.|power over matrimony end with the | 'm every tale of the sea, Long ago | every rider of race hor by the Pa igtataa! Bae Me that a number of different dis- f ilar to this is found pee | “[ don't see what that has to do|And it doesn’t matter who he's/unwed. Many a married sister has| ‘he term “aft was applied to the name of ‘Jawek.” The diminutiv eter eediiary Havel B the ere Cover bes dan, chee | e case of cas and elec with it” Jealous of.” felt just a little dissatisfied with | forward end of a ship, Next came of this, of course, was “Jawekie,”| snpogedly was in bed nal, daugbiar ae hare competition raise ‘if iw can noiae throughout the coun-| Mrs. Jarr gave him a look a “I don't like it, that's all, And Tve|jove's marriage portion until her sin- | the prefix “ab,” for by-aft, or up| and so we got our word “jockey earn cate. pagh A asloop, But a Bete ena rareeccaupetition raises the /try. (Quarter meters, meter de-| thou » Was Surprised at his ig-|® notion to tell him the truth,” sald] gig sister came to visit her, And then | forward, And so Mr. Kipling was| Another kind of sportsmen is thors | gown; a tho second floor called of reducing it Customers would be restrained from POTSn&e: Mr, poor John, instead of being the target provided with a picturesque word io| oughly familiar with the mu ieal| poliga i Th: aS thenieh le H from t 7 MN be haeean Mother, come to the stairs, I z r rough bottle for other than the aid there is euch a thing as be- you do you will be discharged, Jot criticism, becomes the Idol of her ink up with bis story, | We took it from the mousquet of ihe | tg gyi pau pale ‘irs, J want Ae pe d by the distributer ing an old man’s slave, too," she final. |WatHed Mrs. Jarr, “He'll be go Mad) yeart, Maybe he does spill his shav- | Admiral, another word cominon to| French, who named the gun for al”, somatnin loss by reason of un penalized for breakage by a to find out he was wrong he'll dis- b | Yes, dearie; what is it? ible bills charge representing actua) cost “tor ly sald, “I guess Clara Mudridge- K a he'll Pi id 1 ing soap over the rugs and leave his | ‘he deop water, signifies “prince of | kind of small hawk which formerly ipa ‘tohhar en vg = t Z ‘ garth (acminor reason, and there | bottles not returned. Bmith could tell Cora Hickett some. |W se Morire mot the man he was jeal, | warette ashes anywhere and every- the sea.” We borrowed it from the| abounded in France, and which Was] same thing?" burglar mean. the pe rpneone) “The sooner. paid | Milk, distributed in bulk for sale thing about that. Clara started inlous of and afraid ef that he'll be| Where but In the tray she gave him | French, who call an officer 2f that] hunted then as we hunt the part-| “Not exactly, dear, But why do of o particular company's | embraced by the A ll vou h be with her olf husband the right way,|SURE to do it, You keen quiet and|for Christmas, but ob, what a comfort | rank “amiral.” They din turn got it| ridge now. Still another gun of an} you ask?" cular bull@ing of sec-|haps butter cand. milk” products NOWeVer: When her husbapd objects |™%,may, all Ket 4 trip to Palm Beach.” lit is to hear his key in the latch, his | from the Saraceng in the days when | earlier day was called the falconet, ‘Well, mother, I'm saying “my might be considered in the scheme, © her extravagance, she Shrugs her| 4 jarr,| Whistle, his “Are you there, dear?” Christian and » frequeatly | named for the falcon, also a favorite a. P, B shoulders indifferently and says: choke the toads,” said Mr, “Nix om dt for me!" Aunt Emmea'e daya are all alike, |raided each other’a coasts, of the chase < wan nh want to Te isn't Sebees News, Prayers and I don't with both words if sary,"—Indianapolis

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