The evening world. Newspaper, December 5, 1904, Page 12

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_ of Home Government | UME 45........ seeeeeNO. 18,812 for an injune- tlon to prevent wite from talking, the to @ garrulity In excess of thet whieh he deemed con) siatent with ideal wifehood Lpon the de cleton of this novel case hangs tne Deace and do- Tiestic prosperity of the American home and the hard won rights of the Ameri. OPERA-BOUFFE MARRIAGE, ‘The granting of a fifth divorce to a Chicago woman 18) those of our husbands, If the privilege ‘Binde the occasion for sarcastic comment by Chicago “Med to Eve and transmitted i | through countléss generations of her © udges on the conduct of the fair plaintiff. “Her career! gown trodden descendanta be thue sud- § bas been a rank travesty on marriage,” says Judge Bren- | 4*hly rescindat by court onder? | It ts the habit of praotical politictans tana. “She has turned married life into opera bouffe,” the world over to give with one hand gaye Judge Meck. Certainly it has been left to Mrs, ® Tht which thoy at once endeavor to natch away with the other, And the Bnell-Layman to cast a fresh stigma of discredit on the action of the Chicago husband must not Gvorce-m!l! notoriety o: Vestern metropolis. be regarded as the inere erratic motion ‘ag anF OE the ‘West - sa of @ single Individual, but as the firat Yet the only law she has violated is one of propriety, sep in 4 movement of organized man: with which courts do not deal, If she has made opera Kind to nullity the nard won vietorion of the modern woman, Douffe of matrimony it has been with judicial consent! ‘Ticd belpless'y us Gulliver pinned to d the ground by his every halr is ehe to iy Ly t a ‘ GAA with the libretto for the performance at hand ready| 1 ie ave oe tree and fadinorim: ‘written for her use by Legislatures, What theres ‘wrong, inate speech ts denied, and if the Chi- ” at cago courts grant the husband's petition @beurd and outrageous” about the matter is that the Ooh? foi i er precedant taat will later statutes permit the course of promiscuous matrimony in be embalmed in law, our only conmola- : tlon will be that, like eo many others, Which Mrs. Snell-Layman has indulged and give thelr i) ie a mere end letter, from the sanotion to the limited marital unions for which she bas fact that ite enforcement y beyond the the record. However repugnant her conduct may be to power of men or courts, With the best the pure at heart, it has full warrant of legal approval; | *tentions in the world and the stvong- motives for etlence, a woman with res me (he ati ot hn ivoren ini, WBte |S Ne ateney ve sree toe J not bridie her tongue. The head and front of this Chicago woman's offend- Ana surely man ts foolhanty fing {a its boldness, Her case differs in degree only from *novgh to be! that he, or, in- court record deel, Any organized body vf his fellows, mer eers Member which Any divoree-court record) (re irs enough te do whet one one only Way to keep @ garrulous stogtg her And the oro. however atricly enforced, pial ips. But it differs from others {n this par-| WU!" necessitate certain recesses at tleular, that by Its showing of the length to which the 4/4, “itm (0 be mine, abe ware to Gogradation of marriage by the law's Noense may g0 It prictically nullity tho effect furnishes the strongest possible argument for a national ‘here is no denying th divorce law as a remedy for an evil which State regula #01'°e 10 does nox { gon me or other pay a severe ton fosters and encourages, penalty for talking too mush. For no matter how we guard ourselves, or how ‘bitter the experience may have been SUNDAY IN THE SCHOOL-HOUSES, which should have taught us better, we Dr. Henry Leipelger pleaded forcefully before a great are all subject to moments of conver- Cooper Union audience Saturday evening for the daily | *%'9"'! expansion, in which we cone which we later spend vain use of New York's school-houses, That {s, for the SUuD- | yearg regretiing day as well as the week-day opening of the great bulld- It is certain that it would be for the ings, which stand under present conditions {dle and use- eee ay fs mankind if we could restrained from this greatest fem- Jess at least halt of the time. Inine falling. But there is no use {a From 4 business standpoint there is municipal waste making laws for us here that cout 4 4m the fact that the school-house investments are yleld- only be enforced in some higher atute ing far less than their possible dividends in usefulness. Miethyge av nderyests ‘the perfect men- As a matter of ethics, the echool-houses should, 9 sien tor Until inen men sane endonnns or. Un may endeavor yn Dr. Leipziger urges, be converted more and more {nto | to enjoin and legislate ux into . ? Relghborhood social centres where adult education and | but we may safely laugh at their e wplifting may take their fair .urns with the teaching of |8"4 talk on and dety them, even as ‘the children. defy our better there is ——aiiee 4 Sunday afternoon lectures, readings and music— i these may be appointed in the school centres without| LETTERS, 5 confiict with any church work. Indeed, they will be sure “ ~—s te prove & happy complement to the forces, of which | QUESTIONS, ‘ —_— churches form a part, moving for the great betterment ANSWERS. t of elty life. In the overwhelming success of the free- enn _ Jecture courses may be read ample assurance that the x ; People would grasp immediately, fully and profitably the | 7, the waitor of The vening World: >. proposed new opportunities for culture. | In It necessary to acknowledge the re-, § 4 eee receipt of a wedding announcement? MV. WG. 2 AN ALL-NIGHT BANK, No, 141 Eat 125th Street, : 4 ‘The all-night bank which !* to be organized to-day To he Baler of The Evening World F follows the all-night club, recently established, as a con- a wenience made necessary by the changed conditions of ; Pocturnal life in the city. New Yark’s progress away Fe eae Distaoee St Bure from curfew limitations is one of the most interesting — \ ha Phases of its social and commercial development. Tho decade which has brought the half-past-cight theatre Office? ERNST 8. tor of The Evening World the distance from New York Clty to Buffalo? R Effects of Cigarettes. ‘, Performance, the ali-night restaurant and dental parlor aR rb ig Sede age Reda bs 7 Gnd the midnight religious service and postponed bed~ yang boys of trurreen sours? Doce tt time by more than an hour js witnessing an evolution in stop their growth or injure the body? Which the all-night bank is a natural episode. It Is to be re ‘wondered how directly the bank to be open at all houry — !! !s Injurtous to throat, lungs, nerves is the result of the large evening financial transactions“! Mood clreulation, 1 has aino been f! WV beokhel! oat ‘ shown to have a generally bad effect on Which make informal brokers’ offices of the lobbies Of the rain ond general physique of grow-| ‘uptown hotels, ing boys. Jab ‘The need of a night bank fn the Tenderloin would Am Odd Nationality Problem. stem to be a real one, The volume of currency (n cireula- Yo the Hultor of The Evening World ton there after dark in restaurants and at box-offices, in “ hdd Kindly pussie over v thie: A chi was born on #9 Itallan cigar stores, saloons, gambling-houses and generally in steamebip flying a Norwegian fag whi‘e Aegitimate business and for amusement must be large in trish waters, ‘The mother lea Ger enough to make a considerable item in clearing-house ~ footings. Both for regular customers and for emergency man and the father an Englishman. Of what nationality would the ehild 5) use the bank bids fair to fill a “long-felt want.” be? ‘ LBW. sn lied dom es. i To the Bator of The Evenine Worl! THE SOUVENIR THIEF May BEWARE, | Is it proper for a young man to wear ‘There has been the distinction between the shoplifter pay nt 8 A" Svenine reception or aad the woman souvenir thief that while the former CHARLES L, Port Richmond, 8. 1 for business the latter took the hotel spoons or Central Park, #44 Ac: Prospect bottles merely for sweet remembrance’s sake, {t 2 Park, 616 1.6. i fo the Editor of The Kvening World ala been true that the souvenir-hunter’s depreda- — ttow many acree are bere i Central Daye in many hotels and restaurants been balan el Park, York, and how many in Preded additions to other people's bills. A change Prospect Park, Brooklyn? Pp Bow set in, however, which seems bound to be fur THLE SMrTe ’ all around. Port Richmond, 8 1 he long-suffering landlord has turned and, turning, it in the woman detective. She of the sharp ite ats table like any guest. Experience has taught to watch. When any of the restaurant silver Wrong place she drops a word to another Who looks like a walter. Then there are quict ta to well-dressed restaurant society these should be necessary. , emai rep recklessly in. |} tink (we motorme: . oan vated i teal —. The Motorman Menace. To the Editor of The Evening Werld It is not safe to have but one motor. jan on the “L" trains, Ferry-boata have two pilots, one ready at a mo- ment’s notice to take the other's plac ould be 99 a} by Injunction, i; by the Press Publishing Company, No, 8 to @ Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. By Nixola Greeley-Smith ‘ The Evening World Firs. A ii can woman of to-day. |¢ | For what will {t avail us that we| ® vote in Colorado and Wyoming, that! } our property rignts in New York exceed! @ Where is Station L, New York Most- Peeees eee sss THE EVENING ws WORLD'S w HOME CREADONEE EEE EES GEE ODED ETH EDEL I DEE DOLD OODED DOO T 1D 04660664-004-44-468-6440640-54914051000604000000090000 008 e $999-3050-3030 9206-08 34% Poses FHTTSPS £-2-2-F 959-482 £-2-954666-360 9SS9S05-95-93-64 28ST ess PFS POTS TS 8 SH 224559720960. ° : . ’ POSSESSES COE OSES OCEE5-8 ° 66856066 wert ttt. tl Mary > =< The Simple Life. (By T. FE. Powers.) THIS SUBWAY OZONE WILL NEVER Do, } MUST HAVE # He Wanted Simply Fresh Air and He Got It. * we DO LEAD \ Too STRENVOUS ) Go AWAY Lives- 1am GOING TO TAKE UP THIS SIMPLE LIFE aes eh eee eee bee bana aamh aaa nanan , REG tala Somat A Cad Jane Doesn’t Do a Thing to the Simple Life. : Her Papa Tries to Imbibe the Ideas of the New Cult, with She and Kickums, in a Football Rush, ) AND fun (Go OUTSIDE ro e ® 2 ¢ é 3 3 3 3 ¢ 3 3 3 S-3-F 2 92-0 THE SIMPLE /'\ Buand Cd “ PROD SIPS OVS SPY > -2S 22S SS 999698599950 » 3 oo3® PLAY FOOTBALL (son WE PLAY PELL VHS SH SGGHE-39D FDS CTVP HSH OSH SO DOSY M pe ee ee hes 3 Bo * PESIDLOT DD 17% oe AZINE a ee A | +4 A Few of the Thing# Europe Will bo to John D. Jr SEE,” said the Cigar Store Mag, “that Joha 6é junior is going on a long vacation trip Europe.” ; “At last,” ejaculated the Man Higher Upy “he’s going to blow himself. They'll put a crimp in big | bankrol! in Burope that will worry him for a long time, Of course he won't explode any loose change for highe balls or conversation julce, but there are places abroad where they charge for ice water, so they've got him jelnched. It will be a strange experience for the junior philanthropist to be snowballing some innkeeper’s oute fit with rea) mazuma, “As soon as John D. junior sails for Kurope the ate tendance figures at the Rockefeller Sunday-achool will 4 look like a woollen undershirt after a visit to the laune dry. The chances are that Mr. Rockefeller's understudies will give a better performance than he does, but It 1s the name that draws in Sunday-schools as well as io thee atres, Certainly nobody goes to the Rockefeller Sunday schoo! to be entertained or instructed, Young Mr. Rockes feller is about the most consistent apostle of the come \ | monplace that ever bored an audience. “He will get a lot of material to pump at his echolara in his trip abroad. He will pass vhrouga countries in | which a maf 1s considered a piutocrat if he earns 60 cents a day. He will find the poorly paid Europeans | working hard and cheerfully, largely beoause they don't | know any better. No doubt it will occur to young Mr. Rockefeller that a 60-cents-a-day basis would add to the general cheerfulness and producing capacity of American | Iubor." “He wouldn't have the nerve to advocate a 60-centee 2 wage basis,” asserted the Cigar Store Man. “He would so,” replied the Man Higher Up, “If somee body would show him a Bible text he could build hie argument on,” * Third Railleries. q ’ By Charles Fort, Our Unnamed Street. ! ASEY went Into the Subway, and, taking a curvstoneed j C with him, sat upon it to eat hus lunch. To be aura he f was knockeu (ores miles toward Harlem by an expresiiy’ 7 but he vehemently ered that he had acted within his rightm | while hurtling. ‘The protests were loud when Donovan, the truck drivers: if drove down the stairs and along through the tunnel. Gongs } sounded for him to get off ithe track, but he was bred New York truckman and joxged along, with | cars blocked behintl, as was hie right, of course. “What street Is this?” asked a stranger, “What's the matter with you? This Is the Subway,” “TE know, but whut street cs it?” “He's right,” sald a newspaper reader, “Section @, of the | » 4 Rapid Transit act, provides that the road shall be deemed @ public street, No, I'll not pay a nickel; I'll waik down to Four‘eenth st oy arrested an express tralia, bringing ® j speeding through a ety thordughe * 4 And Officer Cl to court, because It w. fare at move than cighteen miles an hour, i] The Humor of It, | THOVSAND men stormed a fort. $ | A Then a ‘orlgade clambered over a thousand corpses, | Red was the color of war, but black was upon bomeg: | taroughout the country, } There were frenzied cheers, then the quiet weeping of | women, ‘ One man turned all to advantage and prospered. I was amusing. ‘There was pestilence. Lives went out !n anfferinig. ; nan was pleased and made his i'ving upon dying. 18 jughable, A nation waated away in famine, The world was sorry. One man could not vomre! dia nurth and ta it wis ete couraged. After all, we must have the Joke writer, Slaughtered Millions, f A correspondent of the Magdeburg Gazette has been adds | ing un the lists of the Insses In the Russo-Japanese war an@ has arrived at terrible totals. From the newspapers he gathe , ers that the Russian killed and wounded amount to 4,997,700, while the Russian press announce—in detachments—5,72,900 Killed and wounded Japanese. This is apart from the naval battles : France's Warships. The French naval programme insures that in 168 France will have twenty-eight battle-shins, twenty-five batt tp , | cruisers, thirteen armored coast guard ships, six first-class | cruisers, ffieen of the second and thirceen of the third class, besides smsiler craft, among which will be sixty s.marines, A Grain Indian, ; A life-size repre: acion of a Sioux brave on the warpath, worked In fifferent grains raised on the Chilocco agriculture farm, adorns the wall {n the ay paclor of the Indian Scyool at the World's Fair, Willlam Diecs, a full-blooded Sloux, is the artist, * The “Fudge” Idiotorial A Fudge reader ty ) | When in writes that he has Doubt Eat a GREAT TROUBLE Pig’s Knuckle. neat up his |] Copyrot, 1904, by the Planet Pubs Co. He probably has | | TOO MUCH MIND, Or perhaps his wife has NOT ENOUGH, It is a sad case. But we have KNOWN wore ones. Concentration is the Remedy, LEARN TO CONCENTRATE! If you cannot LEARN to concentrate eat a PIG'S . KNUCKLE! This will he'p you at once, You will be unable to THINK of anything else, " | Whenever Kart, Spinoza, Nietzsche or Karl Marx hid a” 4 bard Think on hand he ate a Pig's Knuckle! YOU CAN 00 THE SAME! wes to serve

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