The evening world. Newspaper, November 12, 1904, Page 10

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ad) » © ® The Girl Who Is Sensitive. BUT IT DID By T. E. © Published by the Press Publis ia Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter, a : VOLUME 4B...sessssessee ee a | The Evening World First. So men on earth more to be pitied than hose who are me of thety OWN senmitive: ness, Number of columns of advertising in The Evening World during the first nine months 1904 .... Number of columns of advertising in v 10,652 The Evening World during the Thet first nine 1903 ....0004 8, 2854 | time ge r Increase 2,367 | . yi a z seen eeneenee | syntemauio te No other six-day paper, morni ing, io New York tearch ¢ ¥ Jame of di thetr labore in Bf Sees cate. = the dtreation | a never fall of a IN THREE YEARS THE EVENING WORLD HAS peut One| moment * they radiate smiles) upon the unl- | verse, and the next their brows are overcast with gloom because of a abdnce Wor or an unconstdered action which hag led them to believe that they are| | Being injured, | I knew one of these sensitive olants | who hed been « torture to herself and to her friends for thirty years, who que reoently worked herself up intoa wate of hysterical rage at a relative she had not acon for years, simply be | cause the latter, after paying her sev- eral calls within a week, had once ‘ Griven by her house without going in. Nixola Greeley-Smith, MOVED TO THE FIRST PLACE. NEW SUBWAY PLANS. The report of the Municipal Art Boctety on rapid tran- eit contains an exceptionally {nteresting and intelligent @iscussion of city transportation problema, The sug gestions made for new routes of underground travel north and south and the recommendation of two cross | town Subway loops to connect the East River bridges ) With each other and with the North River ferries, outline & very comprehensive scheme of Subway intercommunt- cation, the approaching necessity of which ts clearly set forth. Up to the present time the city has invited or we a Fe bad _ Waited for transportation companies to suggest now 1N@8 Fitgince. But it Ie only panel ns rn | g of transit which served their own interests, It must tn love that she becomes altogether un- hereafter, the society thinks, deal more promptly and Ddearable, To the man unfortunate § | broadly with tho situation and exercise a firmer control *'9#% to love her, and be loved by | ; 3 i ber, her varying moods of euppicton and of municipal transit, The advice is timely and pertinent. | vvnement are a source of dine | The suggestion of most immediate importance made | torture, by the society is ita renewed presentation of a plan for; But neither to him nor to any on ‘a Subway loop from the Brooklyn Bridge to the Erie, regs ed oH Msyasge hires ee mo Lackawanna, Pennsylvania and Jersey Central ferries, Seuanin’ aeeoen er peas ‘ mas . returning by way of Liberty and Naseeu streets, This hour at peace with themeelves and the Dan has previously been discussed and approved in this Work. Fortunately for men, few among column, Obviously relief from the crush at the Bridge | pose ro oo —_! the ia the most pressing present problem of city transit, and | eh ain cece ees " ee the Subway loop suggested furnishes the only feasible this source, remedy for conditions which have become a scandal, The Tt (s a pempetual source of surprine | ‘ew centres of distribution and collection the loop would °"4 dewliderment to men that, owtng to this pecullar seneitiveness of their Provide would serve effectively to divert the various jeter halves, they are constantly being streams of bridge travel from their present single point | reproached for negligence and omissions of dangerous convergence, | which they have not had the fattest It had been supposed that the crosstown foop plan | {1% of committing, They regard these Bad beon datmated through the bottling up of the Bridge | Srurvey"" nywterce or ether vagerie ot | , Sntrance by the Interborough Subway. The soolety says) tne feminine temperament, which must {tt te atiil practicable, Cartainly ita construction {9 called be humored, even though they cannot ‘ | be understood. ee Maas aie na ween 6 oa that supersensitiveness which = at once | “THE SIMPLE LIFE.” @ torture and @ charm. But chey oan- | © not de regarded as wholly feminine, nor | «, Tt must have approached the acme of the inoongruous | O**, ‘Ney be envied. Fowever much to have heard Dr. Wagner on Thureday night lecture in New York—of all possible places in the world!—on the thetr unusual callousness may save them from the doubts, suspicions and despaira that beset the sensitive, For WORLD ¥ HOME # MACA o0d4 S N’T WORK. ; : . Powers. : eer HigherUp BY MARTIN GREEN, io New York Becomes Hermet ically Sealed Every Winter. SEE,” said the Cigar Store Man, “that the all $4 Tin tae suoway ts 00 thick that the manage ment has to saw it out Iu blocks atter the rua hours are over,” “They have a new namo for the Subway confided the Maa Higher Up. “I heard a Harlemite cal {t the ‘Tuberculcsis Tube’ to-day, It’s strange that som enterprising undertaker hasn't had his signs put up of! the stations, In view of all the knocking that the B way ts having handed to it just now an undertakers ought to make a subway Impression on the mind, “Tho alr on the cars in the tunnel would be bad if § was open overhead. New Yorkers don't want freeh am Everything in the town has to be hermetically sealed ty winter. A slaughter-house smells like a boudoir cagw pared to the interlor of a car on an ‘L' express at { o'clock !n the morning or 6 o'clock at night, but if ange body opens a window to let some fresh air in or som | bad air out there 1s a howl that sets the brakes. If ¢ | guard leaves tho door of a car open at a terminal with the intention of letting a little breathable atmosphem dally with the lungs of the passengers some hot-house |flower welghing about 200 pounds and wearing @ fat ‘overcoat and rubber boots gets up and indignantly slam {t shut. “Flate, offices, public buildings, theatres and churched {n New York are kept too hot, Architects and bulldert provide for elevators, pneumatic tubes, hot and cold water service, steam heat and light, but they forget all bout ventilation, A New Yorker don't feel natwrals unless he is breathing air that feels like it is full af boxing gloves," “There ought to be some simple way of blowing @ current of alr through the tunnel,” remarked the Cigas Store Man. “There 4s," said the Man Higher Up. “Open it at dott ends and they can shut down the power-house and rua the cars with salls.” $5 for a Limerick. & w Subway Poets Now Cut Loose and Earn a “V.” ND your best limerick on the Subway to “Subway Lime S orick Editor, Evening World, P, 0, Box 134, New Yori City.” Prize, % A Reuben to town came one day To inspect Gotham's wondrous Subway, Bays he with alarm: “I've a mole on my farm Who could dig the durn thing in « day,” ERIC LB ROY JOHNSON, No, 1% Bergen avenue, Jersey City, A man In Chicago sald: “Boshi” He thought our great Subway a joah, But he arrived from the West, And went through with the reat, | merits of “The Simple Lite” A Serr Pele ON ra | You should have heard him eay: ‘Well, by Gosh!” 4 ¥ He preached his gospel of simplicity in the most so- LEW ZUBLIN, Forty-second street and Lexington avenue, BE pinticated of cities, where life 1s mowt deliberately com- eee ‘ 4 A Jay from out of New York \ ‘ _ plex, where intricate artificiality of head and heart, of MANY THINGS, Bald To Harlem in {\tteen’s all talk;" work and play, of friendship and of enmity, of failure Mon Bo a ride he did take, » ‘and success, of love and of death iteelf, is at a premfum; | | Many things thou hast given me, * att dt sake va awake : | a dear heart) ‘0 the at he was a gawk, a » ‘where innocence, ingenuousness and simplicity go pit! |] mut one thing thow hast taken; MEYER MORRIS, No. 46 Hast Kighty-third street, fully beeing. that high glenm . It 1s possible that Dr, Wagner may have called to-/] of heaven as of @ country that a) There was ® young man in Manhat, 4 gether (out of tho millions who inhabit thie splendid should acem he an’ ale rer the old hat, q Beyond all glory that divinest art An’ the city pay at cag paige : Ake SaBSIe ONS vee Has plotured—with thie 1 have bad Mac to bulld the Subway t vara jegh 4 all sympa we aint | to part From One Forty-fitth to the Bat, ‘ joes not need @ great streto maginas | gince knowing thee—how long, love, PROF. W. BROWN, No, #9 Avenue A, City, | | on to conjure up a more typical New York audience, | will the dream ee | @me Which assombied to have its jaded fancy tickled by a | f each day's sunlight on my pathway An old man from Harlem got gay, atream, And started to do the Subway, piquant paradox, which came to hear delightedly what Seiden (had AAA Seueeel abe 44 His nickel he pdt, am eccentric fanatic could find to say in favor of such a the start? > ‘Whirled downtown and sald: Tuilorous proposition as simplicity. | | Make my days happy, love; yet Ten-] “Gee, whit! but this shite age \ How easily it can be conjured up, this twentieth con-}] treat g sghanats aed § No. 191 Jay at ah te ot | tary ality audience, sitting in satire and in ayniciem, G| ~~ Fag each happler than the} ¢ fay treet, Brooklyn, N.Y. ( ast for me; @ = 4 fhear the beauties of the simple life. | I teat heaven Sect? ehould dawn tol! ¢ New York had a glorious day 7 | And as they troop out afterward we can hear them me, complete { ‘When tt opened the great Subway; *Jaughingly admit that it was well worth coming to hear | In joy, not the surprise I dreamed] $ wi picky Used eine “ged diverting a sow that tean the| | irik 5 in dine aid vent 3 In Sts shadows at hide-and-seek play. may amuse them now that more or less the C. K., No, 12 Decatur street, Brooklya, Conti . , 4 game theory was advanced a couple of years ago, and the ia ae, of Gaye spent here HE—Amn't dat yore preblous Inamoratua wot Is doggin’ our feetsteps, M'lindy? 3 | um gach aeons foot ty Wa inane sata that teal (Mee Batt. in Nomar cat ree eevedee But doan’ yo! care! He uses a eafety razah! 3 Let Women Play Cards, (. @ ie the impudence to maintain that hia benighte ' FE HLOOHAOOD DIO PDGDDDDIDADDODDDDODHD | : mation got more happiness out of life than did our ad- a nen! = ~ Then They Won't Gossip I qanced civilization, He was very discourteous in de- 2 & By Alice Rohe gs | -gertbing the exact type of up-to-date gentleman who l 0 s e e SEE there t# the annual wave of howls against wome © | would have been entertained by Dr. Wagner's lecture, ve and Jealous M | h € M 1 SSl n M rs | I les By Treadwell a | en card players,” said The Pessimist, This tactless Chinaman described him as— in This Romance. e e Cleveland Jr “Well, you surely don't believe {n women gamm One divorced from nature, but unreclatmed by art; ! J * | olers?’ queried The Amateur Philoao . vol re, € art; Ine aaaneEaineeenEEe % ove in anythin thet @tructed, but not educated; asstitiative, but incapable of] grNopars OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS aned forward in his ae: answer your own question,” do when you read your wite's letter?’ | Wendover has what? Hasn't sonthe tae I troutin me vite to vur stiet wish d thought, Treined in the tenets of @ religion in which he| | Mrs Myles, wife of a Wall wives man ating an the surface i"can think of no answer except that |; rl back? Hasn't been in alice thle toe very woman I know played cards and would go dippy oved D/} — does not really believe—for he seen tt fiatly contradtoted in| fiaeeoges from nome, taking her chad with | bivck Iria of his eves sho cares fot You, and has found ft out| reported to the police ing? Sho left a note? Well, have you ” e=he ¢ a Heat Pho Wendover. | s What I should have done was to after oll this time, despite what you| “What did you tell themt™ | Bot It there? Good! | ait reed hi te every relation of life—he dimly feels that It is prudent to W ende 7 nce and trust to 7 A oe Aaa an that “What I i d! No, don't rad It why, what a tercble suggestion,” interposed The Phil aasea) under @ mask of piety the athetar he 1s hardy in- |e 4 ae ¢ is r : At rom Bes a i 7 hat I have told you, | Ea I know you haven't opened it. Al | , rie 2 ‘ ie J | We be first vou beMeved that I had en-| hat you fancied she had run away | Might; I'm listening. osopher. “Why these unseemly sentiments %j telligent spt to avow, “ee rales {a conventional, na pe r something of the) 11), somebody else?” i ae ee ioe reoaver ie 4:7 ear fur" they claim that you eo to think whee what 18 more important, his morals are as conventional a8) Paris, whe 1 necyssary nt “No, no; not that,’ Me , half @ minute longer. en he cleared lay bridge. I guess it's @0, I've se witt Sharity, . ty Yon 9 . NO} yles blurted out " you play bridg en my wife 60 ine . meerees, Charity, Lena self-abnegation, contempt for | “44 ih, "Sivies that, Ne tee} Waa randy te (ane 29 vou belleve that now?” {n confusion, ‘I eald ahi gone, I fontinaed tn a voles hk nea py torested in a game of cards, she has forgotten ail about! \ ae the world and its prizes—these are words on which he has/ was love! iy a French Count . pa i Rage a an if against bis will, the) qiant know whe had left a let-| denly become husky. "You may expect the new fall style and has absolutely neglected to tem the / 4 been fed from his childhood upward. And words they have|?y name The Count usel pronatiem '0 a " ante ae Be rete va ter? me home In half ao hour, Yes, good- jazest bit of scandal about Mrs, Jones . remained, for neither has he anywhere seen them practised | vention “failes : a Amalle wn What further ex-| “Did you show the lettert” Bri veian’ be buns tp the receiver very) way 1 encoura d games {s that tt will put @ cheek by others, nor has it ever occurred to him go practise them : And, being meowe > Ps ta, could you wien? to hia fore-| Myles did not promptly reply. “Anything wrong?” queried Myles, | on women gossiping. Now, I don't delleve in gambling and) bimaelt. CHAPTER I. y that L might not. be connected aay” his poo 439 “Myles, to put {t mildly, you area Pre eae oll aeiurnee Fail with @ I don’t like to see my wife a card fiend, but If there te ' And then this unmannerly heathen goes on to say: mubtacea ntely In bis mind with wh at dover eat quietly | fool,” ‘setewn with te. Patter ecg: anything on earth that will make women stop thetr gosstpy! 0 7 1 : y ere Pot Bsns The managing clerk started and! steaming round the block for the last ‘alk, I say bring it on. And when I look at your business men, the men whom 8 where Potts. once the managing clerk s flushed crimson, But he stared at) hour. No, don't make oxouses, T want ‘Women will get together, They will congregate; so % American Chivalry to mein beaut feet and threw both clench to his You admire; when | see them hour after hour, day after day, fully fe was too keen | jn year after year, tolling In the mill of their foreea and un-| eR —_ oy delighted labors, when I see them importing ¢he anxiete th encase A Clev er oe re Me day into tholr scant and grudge letsura, ana wearing, JRuse—"'He Has Cast ji: He Bee oar ae nd she has gone to him, » his slave. That's what the And oh, Wendover, ‘t, wish to go-—maybe al CHAPTER IV. Ghemaelves out less by toll than by carking and Mllberal @dres, 1 re‘lect, I confess, with satisfaction on the simpler | _(Poatina of our ancien Rew and dang His Spell Over Her.’” : Han Industry, and prige above all your| es the beaten track so famtilar to ENDOVER paused and got up to the league's treasury has a sube @f the deficit with which the ntlal surpius tn fetch a bottle of whiskey from! %" wall oo 5 te ed . eS een bar, Pia ahi onciel An Appeal to the Police fo he Brooklyn igutoket players to coiebrate che close of a most success: |< ~t he lighted a} sini oe —A Mysterious Tele. MM season calls attention to t we? it ahs als As 4 me, we were of thie form of eport hereabout. The ‘ port te i t . ed 4 Woe he ‘i — Message—The , Fopolitan District Cricket League shows that 1 player 2 -s a, * ° tt f that Amalie was sul / Bompeted in the Mbapblenabih dontenta’ tila Fae, aud OO ia teen } awe i 1 ursuit of the Red plese iad wom ‘ee 1 the Chan- Racer. er on board a Pimaliar Nourishing state of affairs tx reported by the New #4 # ; tid at the pler closed York Cricket Jation, which this year had a mem ting oy tse Sanne tt t rbjected | GGMPVHAT Is a very different view of ten clubs, Considering these facts In connec: | jenna), So at i a lo $ sit in some way he T from the one which you enter- Alon with the established popularity of the game in Pnil-| eM 8° *F0Ne Is! sdviaite | ABIY iy Hao, ete male Be tana talned halt an hour ago,” é and at the colleges, the imported sport Is 86D | oes to reach the dowrad tat pelos she ever, “What can it mean commented Wendover, dryly. thriving in the land of its adoption to an extent| went on: ie nen | you will tell mo that {t| Myles flushed and atammered an tn- ; Appreciated by those whose afeotion for H ayeres for. pert. coherent reply. Myles," retui Wendover = « ” . +P Lealiy gave veh cnelg Oger | “Never mind,” continued Phil, ‘“We'tt | jcumen, Tt seems to me that af- %¥Y MO mom about it. There is need for ter what 1 have sald you might try te | clear, cool thinking now. What did you! “The night came; we met again a the Renalssance, but by ili chance Dela Roche was there also,” has bilnded them to the charms of the a oe 1 be Wendover in a bewildered way, the hot you; we are going to get to work at gay jot them do so with the least peril to the human rasa jcolor slowly deserted hie cheeks, leav-| Once. Do you kndw, somethi ing them ‘ashen | over’ mo Just now when I was talking "Down with pink teas and receptions! They are the BY Deay 1 7 rs react. / Mi | bo rag phone, ye conte hein think breeders of scandal and broken homes,” ‘ side myself; a Ww wha wi woul io ther hs bs Md “ Was doing,” |m message to sav-— Con mai Mere Why.” sneerpoeed (he Shlleeegnes, “E Rerer Sir: Pee "That Ta, self-evident." agreed Phil,| the very thought of that fellow de ia *° Fesig betore, severely, And ie ween ¢ ate es Boone ye all ody ot fancies going, "Rabid? Well, you'd be rabid, too, if you lived in @ © poll ‘Aol ni 0; Come! Are you ready? We'll go down house full of women and heard them tearing thelr Bea creatt the theory which you have just) at once. Potter's a wonder, He'll have griende' characters to atoms. I'll bet there nevér was & giver us there in twenty minutes at the out. Myles shook tis head. side, Well, this time the doak “stays polite pink tea where there wasn't at least two women’ till it will be sometying that you) shut. Ry George, Myles, seems hard to characters wrecked and @ score of others put in the agree with me in the theory and that yey you are not my enemy, Or, Myles, let retand each other, are we ene- ‘0, no; good Lord, no! Wendover. Why, fool that I was, youre tue ony {rend I have, the only one to whom | T can speak of thia, the only one who fan help me to find my wife, my Ama-| belleve that we were In something pret- ty much iike a duel only a Tittle while Dcous wagon ; ago.” What 49 you think women go te receptione and teas want, two, men hes, donned hale era. for? M certainly tsn't because there is any inducement im | ene ties, resh cigars, and thruet y o! See, Me A ed Le eed the enjoyment Iine. No! It's to show thelr clothes aad to ' of hablt, Into thelr pockets, hear gossip. Don't tell me T never saw a woman In my! hey "closed the windows and ife who didn't revel in scandal, She on rolling it om hastened out of the handsome subie,| her congue, but when she passes the choice tidbm along ite 4 calling out “Down,—down, thirteen!” " ‘ ‘ Tam gratified thet x let me just as they always did. But this ‘time | aways prefaced with ‘Now, of course, I don't believe @ it In that light We Be , a je to's real haste was thelr excuse. word of it, but I must tell you what I heard about Mra, { wor K together, 8 oan Mord to Ign0re| presently they were excoger? tn the | Smith. . Ti eicohone Pon’ the desk rang Mxurlous tonneau. Potter nodded with| ‘phis ts the worst kind of a gossip. She horeelft hes satiefaction at the Intelligence that he| Se hae apadinar abt rae saves hereelf, tmx@ 1 was to forget the existence of @ speed | *he starts t Grolling all right, all right, y. Phil unhooked the recelver and an awered “Hello? Oh, Sai that? My, wite limit or of cops to enforce one. and ‘Now, I'm not against the reformers. Heaven knows: but away they speed, whirring fh and out|1 am in favor of enovuraging women ¢o Dlay bridge, tor est Side Chae: alnl Herta geutated |every game of bridge means ai isaat one reputation saved.’ Oh, yes. Mra. Wendover has gone out, weck® accepted exhilaration ot ‘high.| “Tou have a high opinion of reputations,” sala Th Where, did you sexe You dont pee poy i wores byes] oes Haden, ‘1 am glad to hear it.” where? No, no, central—w may, inorerbie. ernh wns always 7 ” ere Ss mals tein ont edt Yor ean rotectiine | peste elain terns that's lost, on ; Yes? What's can't hear yot Rarah, will you? 1 Theva aS.

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