The evening world. Newspaper, September 1, 1919, Page 8

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Capacity for Success, OW can a wife help her bus writes. “If a wife is to another, own, and in order pletely routed o! & “gloom,” © “joykill” and all the ether epithets husbands give their Ole when thay disturb theit peace of mind. ‘Phe tactful wife, the wife who ‘Wishes to heip her husband in his lite Work End ‘desires to send him forth #6 battle for bis daily bread with « Bappy heart, first analyses bis dis- position. Ghe finds out what type @f man she bas married and just ‘What she must say and what she must NOT say. te ts another quality the wife of men must possess. so she won example of this ab- faith in husbands was illus- in the three brave wives in Behind our three princes of the Commander A. C. Read, Her Husband Masmed ~~ Must First Have Faith it Learn-Tect, Too, but Must First Believe in His First know your cbild is the princip! tet is founded. Why not use the Binet system for help ing husbands succeed?—first know your husband, There is @ certain type of man who likes an “out- spoken” wife; be appreciates truth and likés plain talk. But there is another type of m facts; he lives in @ visionary, imaginary world, and he would call the plain speaking, outspoken wife a “nag,” | nara-heatea individuals do not be- Then Learn How Best to Become His Inspiration—Wives of Aviators Who Flew Across. Atlantic Furnish Example of Faith. * By. Fay Stevenson Goprright, 1919, by The Proce Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World). + band succeed?” a conscientious bride be a ' ipmate’ in the true sense of the word what shall she do to preserve this worthy title?” Of @ourse, husbands are not made on a» standardized plan and what : would help one husband might be a great handicap to Every little husband bas a personality of his| to help him succeed his wife must, first of all, understand him. The Binet system bas com- methods of dealing with children, on which the sys- who hates to face ——— eve that the artist can receive an inspiration and paint @ better pic- ture, the musician compose a better plece of music, the singer sing her best or, in fact, any one engaged in any line of creative work be inspired But the people who doing crea- tive work know better, and if man only realized it marriage in itself is an inspiration, Every man who marries for loved (this would not include the man who marries for money or for social posi- tion) married because he is inspired by that particular girl. He fools he needs her in his life; that she can give him the Jove, happiness, content- ment and companionship which ‘he ‘The wife who wishes to help her husband succeed will cling to this tft of inapiration as the closest tie Jobn G. Hawker, It should not be the adventure to de going against them. glad tidjngs from the oeen received, Mra. circumstances drowning all I must have sighs the young hope, and charity too, but in | he greatest. essential in the world can give him, wife must inspire her ALFALFA SMITH, teal Yours truly, Pou ery too loud. within before ‘@ victim of profiteering this upon you? If you Jaw you have violated to rent. Why not ask yourself four landlord raises 8 Dusiness obligations. debs not pay his persona! wanting the loan because the and that law may be “or law bagk of it there is a good reason’ Fay no'special re not “hard up or ms to learn? Maker of us all in- “ing With the very lesson you not rather interfer- you really help him? “Just to help hit out.” Biuppose you do lend the bank is concerned, ‘Pit fo fur as the borrower from ‘| foan.” A loan unsecured galled “An accommodation hyn of is what ts » great thing a bank ie without consideration, hes is, & personal about personal debts, There's a great fundamental Up the subject n to-day we to her inarried felicity. Love fora certain woman has made compose an opera which lasts from one generation to another, write a, book which goes down through the ages, and even achieve success |the business world and as statesmen. |Great men all through the ages have been great lovers. Feminine abiity to inspire throughout wedded days as well as courtship days is a very nec- essary quality for a wife to possess ip order to help her husband succeed. “And how in she wide, wide world cara wife INSPIRE her bysband?” asks the bewildered, conscientious bride, * By simply being the same sweet ttle woman all through her wedded life that she was during those first de- Nehtful courtship and honeymoon days. Marriage should not be allow to change her into another entirely different type of woman, Frequently we hear a woman say, “Ob, you wouldn't think I was the same woman if you could have known me five years ago, marriage has changéd mo so. I used to be so jolly and light- hearted and take everything «0 happy-go-lucky,’ Of course all this reflects on the husband, and we won- der what kind of a brute he must be to produce such a radical change, and yet, no matter what dis failings peel think how this attitude of hers, this change from a -happy- wo-lucky wife to @ nervous, worried wife must af- fect him! If she had understood him, known when to talk and when NOT to talk, possessed the same faith in Kim, no matter what his shortcomings were, that the three wives of the air prine held during their doubtful days, and continued to inspire him with the same sweet charm of her engaged days, I wonder if she would find herself sighing, “I used to be go Jolly," >, and her husband so far from the land of success. —- A Toast to Nature— In Cool Fruit Juice. HE julee of auch fruits as the ty bist currant, blackberry, straw- verry, raspberry, elderberry and cherry makes dolicious, wholesome drinks, Fruit juices also may be cunved and made into jelly when It js wanted during the winter, Winter jelly making relieves the pressure of work during the hot and busy fruit Searon, Sugar need not be added un- til the juice # served or until the Jelly ‘a made, Extrict the julce by boiling strain through a jelly bag, To prepare the juice for canning, been boiled for fifteen minutes, } batn, This may be a commercial can- reach the necks of the bottles and th shoulders of the ja: A cotton stop- the bottle and left during the pro- ceasing period, or a cork, after being boiled, may be put in lightly many a man paint a masterpiece, | the ‘fruit with a very little water and pour. it {nto bottles or jars which have Put these-on a false bottom in a hot water {ner or ® container large enough to jhold suMctent water. The water should per may be pressed into the neck of Advance View of Winter’s Evening Wraps —oRo— —o%fo— -—oRe— Style Forecasts Exhibited At the Fashion Show © Recently Held in New York SLOUSE EFFECT()) TRIMMED WITH CHIN yi) CHILLA KERAMI PER. SICA, | Grasshoppers Take Last Hop | (YN & hot nigtt city folks who live where open lots or parks abound can hear the sandpaper by grasshoppers, & tait-tzlt-talt~ }sounds made chorus sounding like “ tzlt." Down on the farm this chorus sometimes sounds fairly deafening to visiting city ears, bothersomg thing’ about hopper, ‘elds and gardens. In certain sections of the country the noise is the least the grass- They are a menace to crops, thelr voracious appetites eating everything green in aight, gathering in armies of millions to devastate up This summer an Ohio genius by the name of Samuel H, Pierce invented an engine of war, a veritable hopper boiled tops in place and half seal. {ecot dtpsthe top of the bottle into} Into This Inventor’s Hopper of death. above illustration Jescribes how the aphone on wheels, metal and hia a close to its mouth, the chamber clear the insects and insures a draught, The grasshoppe: garnered are fed to chickens. however, jump in eggs this sum ner, @ Process for thirty minutes at ‘the) good wax, Finish tightening the|adarge portion of them looking for a simmering point. Remove, put stop-|tops of thb jars as soon as they are| chance of honorable livelihood, With- vers of bottles in tixhtly, and when|romoved trom the bath, Test for} wut the pretection of this society One bore law diy, dash, ewes ee ane melted paraiin or yealing wax. Kquat| place, -|@ long way The machine shown in the is reprinted from Popular Seience Monthly, which also apparatus oper- ates, It looks ike an ovesgrown meg- The funnel is of motor-driven fan This creates suf™i- clent suction to draw the Insects into | Hons the funnel, where they are gathered | Social conditions in any lange city into a p 4 chamber and|like New York and tho activities of thence,drop into a remoyable box. A | those who live by crime are such that revolving brush keeps the alr holes in of the bodies of free thus This, was not what caused the parts of ropin and heeswax make a EVENING WRAP OF BLACK CHIFFON VEL- VET TRIMMED WITH TINSEL CLOTH AND REAL CHINCHILLA. city takes care of the runaway ‘noys, the elderly people who are ‘strangers in a strange 4and and from home, the people who do not speak our language and, most important of all, the hundreds of young girls who come here every day and are simply flies for a spide:’s web in a big city like New York? When you ure hurrying and se’ ing about the Grand Central, the Erie and the Pennsylvania depots and the various docks of this city have you ever noticed a number of intelligent, keen looking women with a “Trav- ellers' Ald” badge pinned to their dresses? They are women sent by the Trav- ellers Aid Society which gives advice, information and protection to all travellera irrespective of age, race, cred, class or sex, and when necessary it provides at its own home, at 465 Lexington Avenue, temporary housing for women and children travellers. Its purpose is to prevent crime, extortion and ‘wrong against innocent and unsophigticated travellers, ‘The services of the society are absolutely free to all. It is sup- ported entirely. by ‘voluntary con- tributors and subscriptions, from philanthropic persons and organiza- IH’. you ever wondered how our advantage is taken of many travellers by these agents of commerctalized vice, Dishonest and unscrupulous men and women travel on trains and boats and loiter along the highways with the deliberate purpose of de- frauding or exploiting the inexperi- cgeed. . Every year. thousands of young women come to the great cities, [How New York the Stranger at Her Gates y Of Ahesd WOuld fall casy pray er sd these unscrupulous men and City Safeguards! women whose business it is to watch for. opportunities to take advantage of them. “The policy of the society is never to gllow a young girl to look up a boarding place at night." Mrs. Maude ©. Truesdale, Financial Secretary vf; the Travellers’ Aid Society, explained to an interviewer of The Evening World, “If the workers see a young girl who is alone and unguarded they immediately speak to her, There are & number of flancees who come here from all parts of the world and the society always Makes a special point to see that they are’married the same day they meet the flance, In fact they keep a record of the marriage certificate, . “We have a number of runaway cases, both boys and girls, Naturally we take\special interest in the girls. The day the armistice was signed a girl, fourteen years of age, arrived at one of the large terminal stations in New York, She had run away from an excellent home in @ nearby city, und was found, soon after her arrival, by @ Travellers’ Aid in company with an older woman, apparently of a vi- cious character, Plans had been made by this woman, a stranger to the girl, to spend the night at a nearby hotel with two young college stu- dents, The Travellers’ Ald protection, was sufficient, so that within twenty- four hours the girl was safely ro- turned to her parents, who had suf- fered tremendously in the meantime, “Some of the stories are on the border land between humor and pathos, as in tho incident of Tommy H,, an tmaginative boy of thirteon, who started out to see the world with $10 in his pocket. The extract from his diary on his arrival in New York tells a very human story and strikes a responsive cord in the heart of many a man who can re- member when his reading of wild west tales firod his imagination and MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1919 | Summer Girls of 1919 DIAGNOSED BY A DICKY-BOY’S DIARY Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). No. 12—The Tennis Girl M ILDRED, the best little racquet swinger at the Inn! neither sing nor strum a ukelele; verily, she knoweth little She can about horseflesh or boating. But—'tis a pleasure to watch that lass serve, With a high overhand motion she can crash the ball down the court and keep it two inches within bounds. Our first set together I was as helpless as a’ man with a thirst. However, she offers to teach me. “Tis well, but she is too industrious. For would I not have her speak of other things than tennis? Millie has such @ tantalizing way of chirping “forty love.” - “Some afternoon I am going to persuade the fleet little figure in white to remain. upon the cool lawn, where the shade trees form an appropriate bower of seclusion. Then—will I whisper “It’s my serve, now, dear,” and slip a sparkler on her digit. Ignorant Essays By<). PR McEvoy Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), EGGS GGS is the junior partner E of the two well-known firms of Ham & Eggs and Bacon & Eggs. They range in size from shad egg or roe to the egg of the ostrich, which, if scrambled, would cover a 54- inch table to a depth of two fect, with enough left over to fill a wast’ ‘et, The ostrich egg, boiled eurd, if excavated would make a comfortable gargge for the flivver. re The most fashionable egg is that of the humble hen. It con- sts of two parts—the white and yolk. They can be distin- guished. beca‘ the yolk leaves a yellow spot on the chin, Eggs are served in two ways —tfresh and discouraged. A dis- couraged egg is one that starts out with a high ambition in fe but is thwarted at every ‘turn and, growing older, grows em- bittered and sophisticated. You know it is sophisticated because it has a wistful odor that is not the odor of sanctity. When one of these-roue eggs is encountered at the breakfast table one should be discreet and yet determined. Open the win- dow wide and escort the ggg with care to the ledge. Allow it to look out upon the tandscape. While it is absorbed in the beauties of thé scenery turn your head away to avoid the shock of the tragedy you are about to enact and push the egg over the ledge gently but firmly. If the janitor should happen to be passing below at this moment the pleasure is all the more in- tense, At one time eggs used to be shied at an actor who failed to meet the approval of the assem~- bled multitude, ,Shakespeare’s immortal line, “Out, damned spot!” acquired a new signifi- cance after one of these bar- rages. However, tendering an egg to an actor is now 4 mark ot respect. They are often set in platinum and incrusted with diamonds, and if worn upon the breast or around the neck as a oe following a similar path, The entry read: ‘I have started out to see the world,’ It waa the first and last entry. His mother was wired in Philadelphia and she sent money for only lack Of courage prevented hig bis returm” — 4 string of pearls 1s a sign of great’ wealth and social prom- inence. ~ It was because of the fre- quency with which eggs con- sorted with bum actors in the did days that these bum actors got to be known as\ “ham actors,” ham and eggs being practically inseparable, lke other well-known twins of his- tory—Corned Beef and Cabbage, Damon and Pythias, Liver and Onions, Jonathan and David, Ham Hocks and Spinach, Ruth and Naomi and,Call and Settle. Before eggs can be eaten they must be cooked. This is done in various ways, such boiled, baked, stewed, fricas Poached, shirred, roasted and planked. The most popular boiled ees is the four-minute egg, so called because jt takes vou that long to figure how to open ft without spilling it all over your buzzum. You can easily tell whether an egg bas been boiled two, three or four minutes; At four min- utes it will rest easily on your buzzum and coagulate. At three minutes it will patter down your facade and nestle at your feet, while at two minutes t very loose and is u: lected months later off the walls and ceiling. fPried eggs are usually fried either on one side or the other, Where two of them are fried to- gether the sides»are alternated, one being fried on one side and the other being fried on the other side. RS SRS COMPARING NOTES, T Seemed that when Rastus and * Sam died they took different routes, so when the latter got to heaven he called Rastus on the tele- phone, “Rastus,” he sald, down thar?” “Oh, boy! Dis here am some pla replicd Rastus. “All we has ter to wear a red suit wid horns, a ebery now, an’ den shovel some coal on de fire? We don't work no more dan two hours out ob de twenty-four down here. But tel! m jam, how is it with you up yonder?” “Mah goodness! We has to git up at fo' o'clock in de mawnin’ an’ gathah in de stahs; den we has to haul in de moon and hang out de sun. Den we pas ter roll de clouds aroun’ all @ay. long.”* ‘x “But Sam, how comes it yo’ bas ter work s0 hard?" eel. to tall de Arne, Rastus, we'a in’ o’ short of help up here.”—Cage sell's Saturday Journal, “how yo’ like It é

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