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Rata Se tar Re My AUGUST 25, 1919 Marriage Alone Cannot » Make a Woman a Wife” Batziock Ellis Has Defined What Makes a “Man” ‘a “Husband,” but Leaves Untouched the At- tributes of a Wife—Marriage Makes Her a Wife _ in Name, but the Qualities That Make for Real Wifehood She Herself Must Supply. . By Fay Stevenson Conrright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World). T makes @ “man” @ “husband” and what makes a “woman” a “wifet” Can ® mere wedding ceremony and a wedding ring change ® man and © woman tito husband and @ wife? When one marries does he become a Dr. Jekyll and Mr, Hyde? Does he have two personalities—first, the personality of & Man or s wonre, &f@ then the dual personality of & busband or s wife? What are'the qualities that make @ man a husband? And what are the qualities that make a woman a wife? In the current issue of Pictorial Review, Havelock Ellis, @ world-famous authority on questions of sex and society, has a very interesting article on “What Makes a ‘Man’ a ‘Husband’ ?” Mr. Ellis makes it perfeotly plain that “man” and “husband” are not quite the same a b “One may thing, even when they refer to the same person. Ho says: know @ man well in the world as a man and not know m at all in bis home as a husband.” Although Mr. Ellis explains very clearly the qualities that make a a f Wifely qualities, The most they Go for her, in, to begtow the title * But the real wifely guali- | tlew'are “born” in her. All the King’s the king’s men couldn't upon his wife's bead, he tries to shield-ber the hardships of the world, time during every wife's life comes a test—a chance when whether she is selfisn , meal, to be soothing and gentle rather than wilful and pet- ted as a pampered child. Strong as we consider the power of love, that quality alone cannot Make & Woman a Wifely wife, Love May be divided into three classes— physical, mental and maternal. The wife whe loves her husband on a purely physical basis, because she ad- mires him‘as a lioness might admire @ lion, may all other qualities that would make a wifely wife. The ‘wife who loves her husband merely for his gray ‘matter and comradeship may also lack real wifely qualities; Dut the wife who po: sband i le’ is the woman we may turn to and realize what makes a “woman” a “wife.” AGAZ ID Famous Internattonal Beauties SECOND OF A SERIES OF THREE GROUPS LE. Sina PALERM RENCH Ignorant Essays By J.P. ‘Coprright, 1919, by ON GOING TO HE word dentist is derived 2 from tho Latin “Dent” meaning dent or hole and “Ist” one who, hence a dentist is one who makes dents or holes, ‘Anyone who has ever been on the rocelving end when a dentist was at work will agree that the above definition is a success, ‘Where then, you ask, does the dentist make these holes? He makes them in various places but chiefly in your teeth, gums _ und pocketbook, When working “on your teeth, he first gives you eas. This was where the Germans got’ the idea, After you are suffi- clently gassed, he tees up for the fires hole and drives off with a ‘mallet. He usually makes the frst holp in par, On the second, he gets into a bunker and has to use his niblick, According to the rules of the game, be should fill up the holes he makes in the bunker, but he seldom does. Neither does he replace any divots and when he gets fin- ished, your mouth feels like a Public golf course after an am- ateur female foursome has been over it. Dentists usually have girl cad- dies who carry the following implements: driver, jiggér, nib- lick, mashie, cleek and-spoon, In + mallet. McEvoy ‘Press Publishing Co. (Tho New York Evening World). THE DENTIST Addition, she also has a scroll saw, brace and bit, forty-three chisels of different sizes and degrees of ferocity, an alcohol ) stove, a gouger, a nerve lacera- tor and a gas attack. One of her duties is assisting the dentist to fill your mouth with things. Sometimes after he has a big piece of rubber, a long hose, a towel, a forceps and both of his arms stuffed into your mouth clear up to the elbows, there is small corner left under your right ear. It is then the duty of the girl caddy to fill that vacan- cy either with some more tools or by shoving her hands into it, The technique of dentistry dif- fers. Some of them use laughing 48, so called because the laugh 1s on you, while others in the Far Bast gét the same effect by slip- ping up behind their client and bamming him on the bean with a While he is stumned, they’ extract hjs teeth and their fee. He wakes up with his mouth full of excavations and his hands full of receipts. Dentists, however, are divided into two classes: painless and otherwise, Distinguished only in this way; the first named ad- minister the anaesthetic with the bill. One Man-Power Trolleys in China ; This photo shows the motive power for a trolley | WH Shanghai, China, on the job. It's a great life if No cable or electric power troubles a enced here, neither do the directors or local public service commissioners fear service interruptions by strikes, walkoute or the like, ‘OF. ERC BATTEN ROSSI How -DONNA, ORTENSE MIONANO ITALIAN MONDAY, AUGUST 25, How to Make Good 1919 A Series of Three Articles. 1.—In the Rank and File. The Rank-and-File Worker Who Likes to Think, Whose Mind Reacts Quickly in an Emergency, and Who Can Decide Promptly What to Do, Has a Chance to Prove Whether or Not He Has in Him the Making of a Real Business Man, By Joseph French Johnson Dean of New York University Schoot of Commerce, President of | Alewander Hamilton Inatitute, Author of “Business and the Man.” it yields that training and experience without which the higher T" work of the rank-and-file worker is specially important because positions cannot be properly filled. Good business managers will be found almost without exception to have served faithfully in tke beginning as rank-and-file workers, Thomas Edison was once & messenger boy. A man has little chance in at the top. of success in @ business if he starte A young man entering busineas in a humble po- sition ag.ong the rank-and-file workers should possess or quickly acquire certain virtues that are highly ap- preciated. He should be eager for work and eager to do it right. He should be conscientious in the per- formance of every task, and not pretend that a thing has been well done when it has been badly done, or only half done. He must not lose his temper when plamed-or criticised, even though he feels sure that he does not deserve the blame, He must be willing to do more work than he was hired to do or is paid for. He must obey instruc~ tions and do exactly as he is told and what he is told, In business hours he must give his mind to his work, think about nothing else and talk about nothing else. In short, he must be @ faithful, loyal, industrious, obe- dient servant. The rank-and-file worker who does not like to think, whose mind does not react quickly in an emergency, 1s only @ machine and sooner or later a ma- chine will take his place. The hum- blest worker in any business some~ times finds. himself confronted by ® situation entirely new to him, for the handling of which he has received no instructions, He must think and de- cide promptly whatdede, Then he has a chance'td préve whether or not ho has in him the making of a real ,| bueiness man. To the rank-and-file worker cheer- fulness is certainly a valuable asset. In business the youth of sunny dispo- sition, doing his work gladly and find- ing fault with nobody, has @ thousand chances to get on, where the sour- looking, gloomy, discontented fellow has barely one. A young man who is caréless about his jooks, priding himself on not being a fop or a dandy, may serious- ly lessen his chanees of getting on. A youth who is courteous and well dressed, but not over-dressed, 1s al- ways preferred to one who is awk- ward and uncouth of manner and whose clothes look as if he slept in them, Business men lay great stress upon personal appearance, and if that High Could You Jump if You Lived on the Moon? Some Interesting Facts About Gravity That Show a Pound’s Not ‘Always a Pound B'escist of the indefatigable caloulations of Sir Isaac Newton, the English astronomer, we are to-day pondering over the novel hypothesis of being able to jump over a house if we lived on the moon. Ana without the slightest exertion you could bound over a mountain one mile high if you lived on Eros, the small asteroid. If you care for athletic feats of strength, you might consider yourself of herculean capacity on Mars, where you could easily lift a 564 pound safe; or, if residing on the moon, you might grab a modern-weight auto- mobile and hold it aloft.” Residing in fhe sun would prevent you from lift- ing more than seven pounds, while a voting residence on an asteroid would enable you to take @ strangle hold of a locomotive weighing 262,200 pounds without causing strain on your sus- penders, But then, consider the weight ques- tion, An average home-loving hus- band will tip the scales at 150 pounds. Should he wander far afleld to Eros, he would immediately shrink to two ounces, But, commuting to the sun, the man would rise to two tons, If you could, perchance, explore the in- side of the earth; say, for example, a little journey through the centre, at the céntre of the earth you would weigh nothing, while at the en- trance or exit of the shaft you would weigh normally 150 pounds, But how about all this strange RANDOM ITEMS. Florida led the States in the pro- duction of fuller’s earth last year and Texas ranked next. Venezuela has begun the manufac- ture of vaccine virus in Government laboratories, A deposit of white marble sald to equal the best Italian in quality hay been discovered near Pretoria, Trans. vaa), Experts of the United States Geo- logical Survey have designed a three- lens camera for map making from acroplanes that gives an angle of view of abou 0 degrees, An Eng! ngineer has found that more water gus can be obtained from coal by passing steam from the top to the bottom of retorts instead uf up- ward. the usual practice, phenomena of gravitation, you ask. Just this: Hach plant tn the solar system has its parabolic velocity or, as we might call it, velocity of escape from the solar system, and as this varies inversely as the square root of the plant's distance from the sun, It becomes less and less as the planet's distance from the sun increases, to which we are indebted for graphic tl- lustrations and detailed explanations to Electrical Experimenter. For Neptune the parabolic velocity is only 4,7 miles per second, Since it can be shown that this velocity of escape varies directly as the square root of the mass of the attracting body it is possible to compute the velocity of escape for ob- Jects op all of the planets in the solar system as well as for objects on the sun, Taking the earth's attraction for objects at its surface as the unit, the relative surface gravity for all other planets, the sun and the’ moon, has been computed by multiplying the density by the radius, both quanti- tles relative to the corresponding values for the earth, ‘What would happen should we visit any of our smaller planetary bodies, where there 1s no atmosphere, as the moon or any of the asteroids, The gravitational pull 1s so small on thesé bodies that atmosphere escaped long ago. We would then live in a vac- uum, We could not walk there, be- cause if we were to remove the nor- mal daily pressure on our bodies of 14.7 pounds our bodies would burst ‘as an automobile tire, Another thing to remember is that exactly Could Do if You We: on Eros, the Small A: irom, ven Moon You © Over a He Mach = Tr One Bound, the earth is revolving around’th- sun in an orbit that is almost a perfect circle with a velocity of eighteen and one-half miles per, second, What if this orbital velocity should stop! Why, the earth would fall into the |sun and the time it took to fall would he sixty-Mur sod one-hah Jays, of a beginner is not preposseasing he simply is not wanted at all, One of the reasons why it Is a good thing for any youth, no magter what his career finally may ‘be, to spend a year in business. working in ‘some humble capacity, is that he discovers the importance and value of punctu- ality, For the rank-and-file worker it ts @ cardinal virtue; lacking it he will not even hold his job. Here are some of tho things that must not’ be dene if the routine worker wishes to forge ahead: He rust not visit in business hours. To do so is to waste his employer's time. : He must not be sullen or grouchy when asked to do extra work or to work over-time, Extra work gives the ambitious rank-and-file worker @ chance to show his mettle, Heshould notbe an envious, sneaking tale bearer, seeking favor with his superior by reporting the misdeeds or delinquencies of his fellow-employees. Tho tattler is always @ trouble maker in an organization. Ho must not come to work in the morning all tired out because of late hours of dissipation, If this is a habit with him, before long he will hear unpleasantly from thé “boss” He must not be a sorehead, forever complaining about his work or his pay. A man of that sort is an enemy of esprit de corps, that subtle fore which is the very soul of the organi- zation. 4 Hoe must not be too easily discour~ aged because his pay is not increased. It others are being promoted ahead ot him, he must search himself for the reason. He should not change employers without very good reason, Business men are always suspicious of a man who has worked for a number of can+ cerns, but never long for any one, He must not seek to avoid the dis agreeable tasks. r He must not be a listless, perfunc- tory worker, but give the best of him- self to his job, Then he may be chosen for high-class work. He must not make mistakes through carelessness, Ignorance may be forgiven, but a second mistake ‘of the same kind ts the result of cares lessness, heedlessness, thoughtless- ness. The careless worker soon comes to grief. He must not seek to defend himself by lying or misrepresentation. If he has made @ mistake, it is much bet- ter for him to admit it bravely and frankly than to seek to shift the blame to somebody else. Employers demand absotute candor from their employees, One break of this rule may give a man a reputation which will forever keep him out of positions of trust and responsibility, Let no rank-and-file worker be dias couraged because his work is lke that of @ machine; the machine is tied to its job, but he is free, The machine cannot improve itself; the rank-and-file worker's potentialities are infinite. If his mind ig alert, if he comes forward now and then with & useful suggestion, always modest hut self-respecting, he soon comes to be regarded a8 a very promising member of the organization and jg in line for rapid promotion, passat aoe HE KNEW! CENE — any[7 S seaside resort,}/ hear th —"Hear thejofth ridge, moaning of the, sOuN? tide, John.’ @ “That's not the tide, It's the ho- tel guests paying! >