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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, February 7, 1911. PaMlnW P . Ficept Sunday to the Prees Publishing Company. " M KM mrk How, ew jura J. AMU'K KMWV In and Trrae.. JOSEPH PfUTZER Junior. M I'arl. Row. 0.1 Perk Row. r Fniered at the r..t-OfTter at N. York s Serond-i ! Matter. NBMriMlon Ri. lo Tic- Rvenlns World Mr the i totci Mates nn 1 ' ' 'i la. Oat Year $3..v On Month 30 1 or v mm'i" iww. "'' "or KOtland sod ri ' nrttlllMt end All I'nunines in ' nisuonai I'osiel fnl'iti. OM Vfir t '6 One Month M Such Is Life. By Maurice Ketten. - - - - - - ,- , i nrLruurwf ijtjui. sssjns".j- - - - - TheJ arr Family VOLUME 51 SO. 18,067. SOCfALISM AGAINST MILITARISM MfK Run 100,000 people from ill parts of Germany marched through the it recti o( Berlin on Hundaj in the fwaera proeeeeion f rVul Singer, whQ had bees a factalist leader in the Refohstaf. It was the greatest exhibition if popular honor ever m corded i hhe rnemorv of i private eitiien In the history of the empire, and will I widely looked upon m ;t demon stration of Ui' exteat to which Socialism perradei the ranks "f the German people. There are l r"ii-on for believing, howerer, liutt the -jircail of Socdalit-m in Qerman) end iii Europe generally li no) to much a portent of thingi I me us protect againsl things, present The waete of BUiteriam on armiea and naeleii battleships uol only in creases tho cost f Living bnl affronts common tense. Reason n. well as poverty revolts apniisi it, and su r t ,,.., ,,,, ,,, t;... most effective antagonist. When even in 1 1 . United States a jingo spirit demands the build Lay of draadnoughti and the fortification of Panama, it it not strange that the soldier-ridden people of Europe turn to Socialism for a change. TI E GARDEN AND THE PEOPLE. MOMf the local movetnetit.s of tho day there is lianlly on.' more doeerving of Immediate general support than that directed toward saving Madison Square Garden as a place of popular indoor amuse ment, recreation and instruction. Paris provide! bat tritisens and her visitors with a Grand Palais iii the centre town, wher ntinuously through the yoar there are expositions or musical entertaininonts of high artistic quality at ow popular price.. Perhaps it is too early to expect New Yor to equal I'nris in thnt regard, but it is not too early to prepare for such rivalry. This ought not to be exclusively n rich man's town 11 place where all liigh class music and exhibitions cost more than workingnten can afford. Let ns mve the big Garden. We need now. and the need will increase as tlie ysars go by. rwwr A FILM OF PROMISE. X ingenious artist is said (a have devised a method of putting i-tage scenery upon gause so light and nlroy that the decoration for tho most elaborate of dramas can be packed for shipment in a single car. For the success of this invention and for its speedy adoption all men and women that deliohi in legitimate drama will most fervently pray. Some will even be in favor of the creation by Congress of an Interstate Theatrical Com mission to enforce fa adoption upon the reluctant trusts. How much the drama has suffered at the hands of stage artist no nun can tell. The aril runs beyond computation. Upon the stage has been piled every Kind of decoration from Spectacular extrava gances to realistic ahomir.n t ion;. There have been real trees, real water, real horses, re.il sheep and real pinches, but very randv any rml actors. How often have wo non $20,000 worth cents worth of art? All hnil the HI inv scene ! 3r You're of rrreAurtCr Two HUNDRED MILLIONS) TAR You lUOONT?! sssssssssssTga win v,w. 7: r i i . . i WELL , ITHlNrC YOLi'LL HAVE lb STAY CTAIL Then urn WERE Loony 0 , r- aETW LP7 NO. SIR HAVE You evR been I f s7iTrY in r a ajx w T hey i There I i as Loony A-b a CRACeD M I I T- I &.rs. &rr bsu a F resent immt of Trouble, and It Is No take V (arm l ' t V 1U1I, Uf Th I'l l'Mililr (Tlw Nnr Ti.fk WSfM), By Roy L. McCardell. 'S' worry an.i ikiii..t i have. f oMK.nfINU'8 twins to hsppn!" nld UrSi Jrr. witnii nly. "I can fuel It In my timmii!" "8-nt1iliin's t srayn BjOSSSsalaC,'1 a.i Mr. J arr, uaa uallv. Mi- Jirr as iptej thlo Inno rrrt remark aa a a tallrnff if" ,a "O n. tiiar a a i i j raT , vry wrll (or u L Uf" to a V, NothliiK aetaers yol : )i ltIJ. "Y o u haven't nil tin- You ilo not linvf to phi Ofl and MVS nn.l Ffr.ipp IS rrake both rnilr mwt, ami titri havn a hiiaiisiid enmo home to And fault and DSVSr any a kind word, hut keep pl.k Inif at you till you arc Just rvady to (o wild:" Why. whnt'i tha mntlr with you, my J.ar?'' asked Mr, Jrr. WB0 r.ot lookinx for trouble I didn't mtan to lay aartMaa to offers you." "TOS, you did, and you ran't set out of It that way"' deeiarn.! Mrs Jarr. "Just baeattSS I told you that I had many thins to worry tno (and tho way you act In not tho leant of theaa), you true out of the houao!" "I'm not irolng to fl'.ns a alng'.e little filnf." sSSortOd Mr. Jarr "H-.it tell me What's wron. Tho otilldren are all ilKht, aren't they?" T. oy IOOK WSlI enouarh," replied .Mr. Jarr, "but who can toll wliat min ute they may be HI? There's aoar'.et fever down the strerr. and our little lire mo wan playing with llt'.lo Mary Kangie the other day, and yesterday tho Kangle chl'dren wore not at school, and It would Just be like Mre. narutlc to hide 'he 'act that hST "hUdren were ill and lt my children play with them and catch It." "I think you're wrong there," said Mr. Jarr. "fUnSl toM me this morn ing t lint his ehlMfoa WOfS over In NOW ark ."ponding tlie day with their unole, who lias a large undertaking establish ment thOTO. ' has bo ight a new I earso ho l. very protlS 'f and wanto-1 tho oMMrm to see it" ' That's Just like the Rangles," sold Mrs. Jarr. "Whenever wo are going any place and are taking the children W0 Invito the Hangle chtldron along, "hut MrhODSVOr THEY l:avo any enjoyment ther keep It sr'fls'hly to ttlOfllSOlTaQ That's the way everybody treats us. Mamma phoned me she was coming ov r to spend tho day. and here I've stayo.1 Ift tho house walling anil waiting for her. She pro:nlod to bring over her receipt for mttlRns and show Oertriide how ti mak loom." "Tan Mid ' ne t IMS SB III expecting Iroul.le, didn't rout" I -ko-1 Mi. Jurr. And then, before Nirs Jarr r "lid an- SWOT. lh lOOS lil rang. The troitWe I had arrived. "Can't you take rr menu's niliTelli Snf! !:e:p her off with her rubbers?" asked Mrs. Jarr. as t.'r mother -tno.l in tht hallway, too much out of breath, to Speak for a aSSIWSnt. The old lady's arms wcio RHod with parka ires, and she i.old on to these grimly ashtlO Mr. Jarr prrforme.1 tho StWlOOS raqulrod of him. "I'd have been her SOOnor, Clara." said Mrs. Jarr'a mottxr. finally, "ut t! y w:e giving double the liaual StnOual of tradlTig s!uiips, and I stopped at the storo to buy s..me things, and you never aaw gttcSl a crowd of ri de and kkStllal women. I had to ol reoat knork over three or four of rhom if(.re 1 could get to the stamp .inter. What are TOO doing rem?" Tills last remark was addressed shrilly tJ Mr. Jarr. "I'm nlwaya home." replied Mr. Jarr. "Where else ahouUl I t7" "I didn't ask where you ahould be, I ai.ko.1 what you were doing homo." IM the reply. "Aren't you running trie osv ( loon at the corner7" "No, I am not:" aald Mr. Jarr. stoutly. 'Wtmphl You upend enough of yoar I inoney there to own It by this tlmr J s M imither-ln-law. "Woll, It's aoao of my buslnesa. Where aro tht oha dr .? Running the treats, I ouppooo. Oh, well, It's no wonder that cbUSron glow .p with no love and raapoet Sar j parents thrau days. Where's tha aulf Out at the etores dawdling and ab bllng around Wttfe the .inks, as usual. ' Weil, It's none of mj- business, but I doii't permit It with MY servanto. X j don't keep any of that sort. "Well. I suppose you eipect mo to do the housework." continued the dear old lady. "I am going to oay, light , here and now, I won't. But I will show I the lary thing how 10 do her work whUe I am here." I Hut when they went out to tho kit hen they found a note from Oar tnule saying: j "Aa your mother Is romlng. I'm go ing. Chonso between ns." "Woll. of all tho Impudence!" rrlod Mrs. Jarr's mother. "I'm going rght : homo, wiiero at loast I won't be la- j suited'" And she did. "Didn't I tell you something was go ing to happonT" said Mis. J.irr. "I slt ! It In my bones"' 1 And. soemfnaly footing hettor sr hs knew the WOVSt, sir hustled ground and , got the tlret good .lliiner Mr. J.ir hsd had In mo ms. - F The Story of a Jilt Ten Roads for a Happy Businesswoman aessjsajsajasjsj n By Herself v JSMS,s,s, isaoiwssiswsasin sJSSilrs sj , . ---JrXinrxjTjniru-jnjr f nwncry and thirtv ODpyr.ftit. 1B1U, t,v Uonhledu. I'M Oo. HYNOI'SIA. Th Jilt. Kev.r i i- gir, a err a aerlaa of ' . lott affairs. fc tu a roorant haraistul to rare T.(r i.s-r mi aunt. 1 iiwre stir turorta in nay nn --i ii - . makaa an inatAnt ttntimalon. Hat luririf tjltft id 1st a iriest. Iir- ; .' away aU ll.oiifb' of n.. 4a' Slit li uQtesl it lert-ai.-i i a itlent. William Lloyd, whjum Iir. fUj ,1 lm. Itrspttsj Uia i : .j iht ..m.ss ts u4tl 10 Utoff It: offtri ta . t bi usn nl fWJf tn ksf liar fnuj to wTaUiwd a us rior I iial'.v iriswit iaih nifti tn f-rnvv to N-v Vor.i, Ttsffsrl aha HsatJ tn lovo vtitli Ixtm.i.il Hall, a Linit. By Sophie Irene Loeb The Creed of a W orker. CiTY SIGNS OF SPRING. AbTKU BONNETS nro liorr. Thev nnii in Ftunday with Hie Kaiserin Avguste Victoria. In n day or nr. tho show windows of department stor and tnillinerv shops be so aflew erith t.ho l.riplii neas of feathers and Sowers ns to resemble the nooks of tropie lands where liini. of paradise net nm! rttireoulous blossoms bloont Tha eeatn of the now millinery is to New York what tha eomiaf or tno proctis, tii iwy are signs t approaching spring. They nro more tlmn an aasnranoe; of a new npaBSO they uro the promise of ,i renew-nl of an old ilrliplit. All ilirt worii! I eager for the Joy their loiity promised, on flunday upward of twenty-five thousand people went to Ooney aland Jnst to crowd tin D rsry softly, the stanza ' IWnt t'i si know tiiat sweet lnd wlitrs tlM "rm floweri grow. Vl.rir ibl all It Itkr nld. AOS the rvi rosts bi(JW?" I turned from the piano Into Ieonsrd llal'.'s arms. 1 Know that land!" he cried, "and I'm going to take you there, rlylvta." And he repeated my name over and over tl2gayL'f' ii. ... of frnt iit.s mid flowers na to resetnlile Hie " '"W to a olu:.l. And I had " "ylvla. Hylvla! aytvla: ' ao If It 3P5Mrh , . , 11 n" ,n reaemwe the nikV hnr. any W0lhan M , had I mu.lo than any his angers rjp -jp nooks of tropte lands where birds of paradise ne-t soorasd to do so. .had ever grfoasa. rve iiien waiting." ... '..ill mi, .....II ... . mi.'uiu it ie.i. Now the time has come. " I didn't struggle I didn't aalnsav him. I just Btayod there In his anna. SnoWlirOI) nml th Vlolnl .. ti,n c,.f;. ! aaarn. Arel after n whUo i I m5' Itt'B "" t touohlng his, my eyes uiamay rat my near Duncans, I rented ' an apartment of mjr uwn In Oramerv Park, pCead-ing the neen of a studio. which was impossible In their limited quarters, as my excuse. A professlnrMil woman of thirty may ' with propriety have an apartmetvt of i her nan In New Y..rk. A muelo room. a lied room, a kltnhen. to mnA a .Inv Season) JllM to piihli the time Slonsr. Tlie sirrht I tl1"'1 Sth thai wa my house of ad- Of tries oi.MS.in'a IimI.s u ill ,.l .1 ! ..... . ,, VSaniTS, How Innocent It looked, how w " -..- lis s III"' I i I 1)1 I I I' j I I f Chapter VII. t Continued ) T was worse than it had ever been before, both because the dominance of an ugly nun Is always more absolute, lMn,' compact of qualities more In vincible thnn mere flesh, and hecnuse Leonard Ilali had a little pink and white wife to whom iieachory would be as treachery to a Ohlld. And I had never hurt any woman before; I had arorned to do so. Hut this was to be' High heaven oouldn't hav. .topped It. Leonard Hall and 1 saw each other again, of course, and then again and with h:s sensuous lira and played for nie With Us wonderful hands und nev er made love at all Yet I knew that i: was coming. And afler many months It did come. tumuituousiv. Imperatively, .as i had known fr..n. the tlrst that It would I had been slnu'.nu that hauntlm? aria I tak from "Mlgnono" "Dost Thau Kn,.t, 1 was where we stood securely alone together i nor. wit ness. lie led mo nt laat to a chair and knelt down lieside me why is a man always roii.lv to kneel AFTER he lias CONQL'BRBD a woman? and told me his plans for us. lie was going me to the South Seas, and there a vessel sailing Saturday. He' t.iat Sweci Land'"' and all the yearn- j would Come for me the next night. ing or an exile had swept upon my soul , Friday, and take me to an obscure llt and Into my voice. 1 wanted my sweet I tie hotel In an unfnshlonable uptown land wherever It might be' I felt as If quarter, from whence we could go to I had i.een gn Mien nil my life, and with an ullen's wilfulness I sang sgaln. rope, where the eyes of the tourist could seek mo out and scorn me, but In the South Sea Islands, amid the oblhion of IKilsorious scarlet flowers and sunshine too Splendid 'to be quite safe and sane. Who Indeed would preserve standards there? I shall never forgot the next day. I mad. mv preparations as simply as If for a week-end visit nearby For th- re was to be no dismantling of the apnrt ment, nothing to Indicate a fllg it, though I was about to step from one ii'lnr. as f uvnnotlied. Into his eyes. I wonder now if I wasn't hypnoMned. And yet I had known all the time that this was to be, and I had let It come, nay. h.lped It to com., as the room aether to the steamer Saturday with- I WOrid to another. out rear or recognition. HIS WHO was. . ,fl)t wMH. , pttCltM phantram nguies luckily, out of town. thronged around mi a strange com- At mention of his wife I made my ,,. My dfa)i niofller ,lnrt father. nrst protest. 1 spoke of duty, honor. whQm j klu.. , on, thOUSJh I had loyalty too faintly perhaps, for S no, rememborrd them, cam.- and stood did not heed. , ,..M- , , u,.,,., A,,n. "I know," he Interrupted authori tatively, "I know all that cant. Hut, Sylvia, there la a higher law! We HE1.0NQ to earh other, you and II We knew It from the first: Cnn you con ceive of me as MATKD with her'.'" 1 thought of the little pink and while woman, as pretty as a wax doll and as vapid, and I thought of hire, child of I jo wrsl iMNCieesrn Alison, pa'.e and elim and piercingly sweet: tlie men who had loved me. one by one, and who had all offered me honorable marriage; and last, but oh: not least, that little pink and white wife of Leonard Hall's, looking at once so much more Ilk. an Injured child and so mpeli more like an indignant the whirlwind, and I had to admit that I women than 1 had relieved poSSNS I could not. iTo Be Continued.) I promised to go with him. It leeined to me that I had known always I was coming to this end. The pathway of I the years had led to If as Inevitably as discovered sin :..d. to death. But my sin was to be hidden, not in Jaded Eu- - I t . L , iiojuiiu iii.ii ii, iii T ,lllii lino or have a s-arev meaning than those of the ocean or llio vilderness dies; like a manntaa tirsi swallow. For eitv sienn Letters From the People! Tlie tirnrrr'n I nun Hour.. Hit BSHm -i ft t Of all mm iMr. .. . ..-ii mis wi, , work. a. b,.i,. i, , his helps., ihs 1 . .. u.'.Ing fron I in S a the m .1 , m .. . d someilm.e IS nil 1 h to apparonay niiy, and by gave no tiickovy Ing whl'h tline ' . Id On 00 of Ins ' 11111111 ouisini.l nionev sqissndsroS on Miassll and I. ie i... I 1 a I 111 t.eell csilghl doe, II. : prove lo Ilia kVOssjjjg man . ,, , - Insane, uvun if u biu.oi.i ... .... gs "i 1 not im so n n 1.1 voniuro. How Innocent :t looked, wholesome iuid hOtSSSWafsSyl I moved in In the aprlng for then the blood (lulokona most readily to Impudences, I think and, with boxes of Jonquils blnoirUlsf In my windows end the eun sM'ne str.m'iig aenws the polished n nt of the music r.Kim and lingering w irmly on the little rosewood piano and lighting the Ts pin SOS prints, I thought my home excuse enough for Its Otvn exlstf nca. Leonard Hall came atil sat In that music room, by eurvllg it and by candb light, sn.l looliM at me with his email. i-iat lis i""" eoioren oyos am laugnnit at me I ollittis. Reflections of a ?t 'it Bachelor Girl nr. -.r" Maasn-j By Helen Rowland Copyright, ill, fcy The rreai PnWiihing i"e. iTtu Nw T.uk Worl.h. fin the Tall Timbers SeseeSaOtaSNSSaeS. ( V iVei average lore match is merely a matter of pink sT 1 in h t rt t n rv nmiilti ntt1 rn tel.,itn seaeaisssla t" f"i"wtt -fi iravewts RBfu ry H1mitl doomed to go up in smoke. 1 vrirn lot r rfies a te(f woman Will etvs if a out -A-hurinl without stopping to prrurni nn autopsy on it. r ogo could 11,. twey sores Uresi ; .; ,,. A t, i ef even Men i , .. .1, to ISatesgotvei ... ehone to at;. ii ; . , f there l ne r-oi t, r.,- f r i 1 ni psispi. gould . medlosj prefeiotoa mas p.iaa roaOlUllolls, J10 hum may ohjjool, mi in., tvoraas eittaes w;ii eaten.i bis Iwgftl roi.griinili.iHi to tn jury au,l N Jlldft itH.iun, And may we liuva Slugs SttOll j.iri'.s, Sad inure r n.'li of. dliilsl A ft H edtfeville Edit o r fly John L. Hobb. 1 far-Haas Is S ISOSten'S MS tsef b, hut, in the average girl's opinion, the .hardest part o) the work cnili at the altar. It is itifrleiiU tn fell WhSihSf Eve van supposed to he an improvement on Attain or ninelp on afrrfnonphf. Haojrd, lug '" '"!b...1 with 11.. . It's sti Ts 1U1 Sdiies 14 The Bsrelsf Weeldi sss don't mi. 1, in ., , .... , . 'a nswo o Iht lottos vt 'il H u, '. hsstday, fai . , ,, , " w"h N " ssalna u'...ti ht tw no te oto.e, Mklstsj oaii t ... ;..., : U ' 'S "hat) pshaw11 asp slssplssaas 1. meay, j. . ,. ! - " mjp rrustssnd feHsrl am. , eg, snga, 1 ill wild ii.uiiaiy fus iasssaalsi he S i"' ... 11 V ' l eat, Iht, (tTy in. - ai The t-ltisene of yorl ... . ,.. fSft .....I .al made, being rather lend a vols at hiaks , , :,,,t ,., Iai , ;..i... . ;., t. ntorsjn0i hut thaj rniarUl Hsbtn ewe, oho o sensiUy rvtunQ s uur., by making Ulwf af ! footed 11.. BPinioa, r uia blah "d f.., iu (up. tm ni,;;,, brows, wtssss no -r i iasanlly, ..i dsalsi iieuld iibu.it no hSM aSfttls let ar U - Cad la soi s ( would ibs mm SaWsive buyi stfriosi pay ..1 terns S - ; ... ... , . lrtM Vt opeMrod Wiim- H!''! wss -sn. erlotlHrt H fhfl) ... ul thai wa ea aa ottssslie mu.u... ,,, 44f. ' '' 1 f Sllir Hint baa a nnn,l mind has a atruaaisas voice. r BORflm TltAI'MT, Iht UTalStSAkati rll, H t.uil 1.11 illHliy dootorg 144, 11W..1U isn n ! .,. :.,n thai inoUn SSfSflStS. u oan hardly Of eninr, tronmn sJionlit haVS the ballot if she wants it or anything else she lennts; ami 7 tnru u-rre polite thej il give it to her Urflhotll being in rutle and fussy nhout it. Hny HaJIsRI 1 .! thai tli IUiVliies his wile u afataal ISPS merely n matter of "being on the same u lie; the letpei so uftm nft oroesesj before the ftoairifstoos ti overt hut. alns. la ik; i, a at as. in. ii wl.n gi S oiilv o. 31 .ait of llSg I Fittsi than ' A SI Oh fnaotSI thai ffi morf subtle ami effeetlve iray to flatter a girl I ! to speak prlttoallp of ell her irt friemi--ad if iiuof is. D nKI'H got nevtr In e-.e .. is al- as Pays egaiiikt the law to kill them. ertatnlu o RHSBOnfl una B'lc enii fie "ftlmas" nfter th'-y are Hvotett 1 ' I stuoh wmrr sestlVi Hoti IhM before fhep aro Uvotott, MRU H'lmiNti. 11. a mffragelt., s Vhet wiisr, tht r."1 things of lfa ! 's Hwt 4,v.-i to a weMten she ntssnes '' V41f '" 'ip' ) matrimony, but you never can tell any fM hy ft esessjltvi MISS HETFY SCRUDCE SAYS- IT DONT PAY TO CLIMB TO THE TOP TOO QUICK CAUSE SHE'S NOTICED THE FUST CREAM THAT RISES IS THE FUST TO GIT SKIMMED Sag? Ijjhy I KNOW n woman on the business ladder who bus unconsciously formultttd a creed. I lay "lanlder," since shr la gradually ilim'.lng. and I tVnk she will roa..-h tilt top through the very force of that creed. It Is something like tuis: "I believe In the PHHSKNT work I am doing and in Ihe people who BMPIiV inc. I holleve In W'ullKHfcil. not UlIINIMi; In BlVtna the PUelH-VP rather than the lC1lt DOWN, 1 believe Ihet St lM BUI l i V else I an fill gy Sb, but thai 1 oan do It BSTFTBR. I t.ollevo that a hard Job ON HAND Is WOrth two easy ones In the PROKTJHC. I believe In dOlrgj what 1 ba'.o to do TODAT to save trouble; and TtVatORROW 1 believe It for the same reason. I brlleee that honesty Is the best policy Jut because It tweets In you the same thing. 1 believe that a soft answer tunieth away a grouchy boss and that a kind word DpaWTT COST A. CKSt, 1 believe that ANV woman who wants work gets it, and that for me there Is always somrth'ng la 'the oeartS. I am leedy to do my part -ItlCHfT NOW." To earn it all up. this woman believes In llRRRnijF. On the road for a happy business iromnn, the first step necessary is a 6cir in onr's self. For If we do not believe In ourselves, bow are we to make OTHERS belter. In us? The above young women, by the very natuie of her spirit of seif-confldenee, must of necessity CREATE that cmndence In others. Tha man or woman who is forever going about with a chip on the shoulder complaining that there is n lock of appreciation Just rOOOtVOS the Invited t,'NAl'PRPX.'I ATION. But If the days go by finding you with lack of love In the thing y.iu do NOW the end will find you where you began. Thei.sfore. this w orklngwoman ha. Bee rluht system in beltevliiK In NOW. Also, when the man who pays the wages to TROUBLED, and mey even be. In the vernacular, "grouchy," how muoh bottoi It Is to give the ".oft answer," for any OTHER kind May turn the wrath uhe ot her ' way YOttR way. Thnt eny woman who really SEEKr' work finds it Is an old truth. With belief in one s ability and WILLDtOVMIK it is no Hffteutt matter to pteltS SOMEBODY realize that you are there for the purpose of trorkiem and not weeping. The fallacy often Indulged In lies In the feeling that no OTHER person may fill your position. Philosophy teaches that there Is no vacuum. This is quite evident in the cods. merolal world. Very often positions are but a matter of changing faces onll'. True, you and I may make ourselves valuable, but that there Is NO ONE may hocomo Just as necessary is FOLIA to believe. To give the SMII.K rathe: than the FROWN In bust-ieys is s'lrelv an asset. A smile Is contagious and often, very often, dispels the gloom of disastrous transaction with much more BPBBD than the OQBtPUAINIXG p. OCOSS And how much better It Is to bo BURH Of one's CHRBRPULXKhS rather Ihnn to take n selfish refuge In rhe right of the matter which ma; or may not lie FAIR to tho employer. And nt all times every business woman knows that the "DO IT NOV," habit ts the surest means for rtSfhlfH overs- rung of h. t ado l.iddei that n. ikes for PROMOTION. For: TO BD UaLW'MVBTAttflVQ, TO MILK, is the safety ROAD To SUCCESS! e The Day's Good Stories 9 Shelby the Henpecked. EUHWTf HT H r k it vrhht. in an tftleu pq xtw l ra t i if Ik. r' nlrrtr. J ri--M'lit. tssfUWi t.j. tip Uit on tl.a hoin Ilfti ftf (hi Mif.tr "I . I'ut i IvaJl'a fallu-r was a lurgefiti, hut tounliiHl r.taratiir at CMM point If attpn.ltsii Mart CkaiwlB Hiailff for a timu. lie IomiwI It no rrtit Ulta to evit uiwiii t list,! luflr, H!' waa ti.tvtt inltrlrg Hlirtlrri' WOUl UlM a alavu, ami narn,j hit 'iff mt with lift n.in- i . i t.s.i' " It waa 'HiiftiVy dn thJ,' or "rtlirtlty do tlat' Inuu iudt. Inji to aUCeati tvitli ptfaf jh nnslestrluH wtnH aal arl'tox a .iuIII ona, ho t lm eMaf Kiimlrall da i 'Aai on ninip adrtcsi fo hlmllav, and Uioufh urt a man of .tirafH, a,ap hia iu.nt as lt ! MUld Oa tlav wlian t he ,pri ha1 dro,i ad iu ; j sateli Maa makfl pllla, " 'Vmm t all, Ulidlay ha said 'Ymi'ra puMitig? mi w4th ton mucU iimiaanaa t.-n mur wife, efnu tuisjht lo slmv antua (afklMtit, Vou'i-a a man, f .a', .rry !, il. -n't uuia hrr tMhs;aV' "Vtaat 7U Qlglt tO til.f.lP fttf h-'tey Btf at ' 'IVh, tri tha ftteMalAB! . Uisitli log ite Jhir I w Mitaisja.1 " OH r.ixtr o Longer m the) Dark. ASUUTNSH i.r:,, Mlilstsf ,.u eug MtN ssd prteursd the elewtua . a awah l.nn .ril. t iSfiat, as Kimitai Tt, SMh ininl.irr'. sorrsst, B M , m' MM orer 10 the lUUao la lru. th. vi.itin! nr ennit ioiiUmiuii to tin. nun. ' Will. I L'l trail. BMlJZi .1.. i ... .... Irisltet to i,. .'7.1 7" 2 tM f US MM srrseds tn ,u, i ... , gi0, )1JB14 iwwi i.c riuriia. xi " fiu-tnus siid ihis4iei.fi t Miiort tu Uli mutsi. I Uis i .04 1.. it wsi As tot II da It us, ss a tui 11 ua g . , ' hm In Mil 1 me himi.ll n ii.1,! ! ". !?' lVk "m r "Mi nr if tSi J X . w I I i