The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1906, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Magazine, Wednesday? A Tug of War. ie By J. Campbell Cory. Che Laan hy the Frese Publishing Company, No. & to @ Park Row, New Tors tered at the Port-Office at New York as Becond-Class Mat Matter, NO 16,468, WE A7. cevceesceeeencoynne RUSH-CARTS AND MARKETS. \\Bysteearts have been recelving the consideration of a special munticl- pal commidgion. The report is In favor of dividing the city Into two, districts at Broadway and Fourteenth street. South of Fourteenth street the push-cart men are to have specified stands. Elsewhere they may ply their trade from place to place. . | Good and cheap food for the inhabitants of New York !s a compre- | hensive problem the push-<cart matter forms a small but rel- q 1 food, fruit, vegetables, nuts, candy r edibles, That they supply t demand is proved by the tf th f ¥ did not n the sh and If not more convenient, peo- ronize them and ly ¢ make they ple would not pat they were f of | eo ke strength of the push-carts is that they sell cheap, Quantities of food which would s in a day or t are bought for to nothing by cart less than the: retail stores can “men and quickl afford to sell at To give push commission proposes, Who have to pay rent, buy store fixtures and incur ¢ xper the push-cart man 4 t j they should no more emery Mat Bicrge: NAN a3 in ith Ss every art a fixed station on the city str . as the hop-keepers, $ from which property, and trac uld be an injustice t exe Streets are valuable to push<art men sotictate: anpaty The city should provide a complete system for Purchase of all food supplies by everybody. When Dutch village of New Amsterdam there was a comp CRY “iarkets. At places in different neighborhoods there were buildings erected and owned by the city where all retail dealers in food supplies gathered. These market stalls were rented at a reasonable Price, and brought in an income on the city's investment spection was made easy by the concentration of the dealers. Better facilities were Provided than is possible for scattered small shops. As New York grew | the market system was not extended, and there are now no public mar-| kets within walking distance of the great majority of the population. The successive steps from the producer to the consumer are espec- fally burdensome in food supplies. The handlings by the commission| man, the wholesaler and the retailer are wastefully costly. A better sy =} tem is hardly possible unless the city provides the accommodations. — cheap and easy York w ystem. of New the convenie The establishment of the fish market has been a great convenience to the people in the neighborhood of the Williamsburg Bridge. The Health Department can do its duty with Jess trouble and expense, The! So you have put on the gloves again, Mr. Bharkey—not the padded mit of the | prime ring, but the white kid cowering of the social world. Bociety has eased upon you. Tou have gased upon it. That's where you mado @ mistakw. focltty in days gone by has come & you. ‘Breakaway |’ Is the Advice to the Polished “Pug" Who Now Sidesteps the Uppercut for the High Handshake. Kes clawhatnmers have mingled i $ i i + THOMAS SHARKEY—Por ng the retail dealers benefit by having the customers come to them, ; biggies poe ‘ae rh eg As Sau wracot With Joud-checked gage at the ringeide when you boxed, and waited A like establishment of kets ic ’ Tat, ae een Pourtesith streat or on ocea-| @xfourly to shake your mailed Mat after the knockout he a general sav a 4 pears st Hib mraiateras er the city would sonal ban kie aN nsec ie Musk oc have hoted your Mahomet would never go to the monntaim if the mountain would come to genera ving and a great convenience, Fulton, W ashington and heme in cheaters of light tbAt proclaim a desire to quench | hth, Tou were sdotety’s mousibaia of making yourself cheap by becoming moerely tty aloof society sought your Aghta, your club, your ipation in « bout brought miMonaires and cotlllon standing on your own ground, you made them ookel up to you. But if rou it you're fm danger net. Bo long as you hel Promines in your parti s to the Fingside, And, very #ovell. They admire you. envied you, Gansevoort markets are too far away from the small purchaser the thirst of the passerby. For a long time. too, we bare B Yen grateful to you for not galing on the stage, For one Mah Wtlef evening, the occasion the frat night of the Jeffries M/oon Yiay. you were @ dramatic critic And for that we are grate also, beowuse you knew enough to quit But another and more insidious madness has come upon you. You have sidestepped the uppercut for the high hand- shake, Taking up our morning payera yesterday we read) not that you, Tom Sharkey, had boxed #o many rounds, or | #xpounded the gentle art of jlu-jiteu. or invented # new The fime and ¢ar fare required to go to these markets impair their useful hess. Both the Washington and the Fulton markets are valuable prop erties, which the city could sell for enough to acquire several market Sites in other neighborhoods. Under the’ bridge approaches are market sites for which the city has already paid. Public markets would also be Cheaper for the retailer amd would enable the prohibition of food stores in tenemertt-houses, Both retailers and consumers would be the gainers | Tea vik lance Wasicasetw on coclaten Same Meeks ans tiistakh ithe barhy Duchy: | sawood calr and that Engiewood's most exclusive matrons 4 A ASE inthe had delWy ited 46 do you honor. tee | meet them on thelr own territory the advantage wih be the otter way It they put on the gloves with you you will not be Able to laugh mote or harder than they will when you put on the gloves with them. Perhaps you oan keweok any man 4e society oat with your little finger, but can you look @ fxt knife in the eye without etnteirrasmment, and do you est peas with @ fork of ® spoon? That'a the third degree soclety will give you ff you seek tt out. | yaw avm_and‘let society come to you, By E. F. Flinn. Biay where Comptroller Metz tells with distinguished frankness why he ts for the De- » +4 My lncey street *L" Toop, ints because the Brooklyn Rapid Transt Company) Making Light of Serious Matters, # «# # Promises to run cars on tt, What does it matter that, according to Chief Ens Bineer Rice's common-sense report, the loop would bring no relief from the bridge crush? The BR. T. would have @ belt-line to Play with, and that ought| #0 he enough to make the whole city glad to pay the bill, | FASHION FRIGHT, Nature takes pains not to have women look all alike. The nonmal ‘woman rejoices that hér attractions are not as those of her neighbor, or even of her dearest intimate. Nevertheless, the same normal woman | dons the colors-which her neighbor wears and has her newest gowns cut on identical lines and gives her fresh fall hat a like tilt and like trimmings. | It is done in the mame of the fashion One might think that the mistake is of nature's making; that indi. viduality is not intended for women and that it Is the mission of fashion to correct the error of creation. It appears, however, from the lecture just delivered by one woman to ber sisters in New York that the trouble is quite otherwise. | The fair ladies who follow each other’s forms of dress are impelled | hy their own timidity, They are afraid to be “too- differen | A woman may have the courage to grab a burglar or knock out | the tian who insults:her on the street and yet not dare, in the face of il uae September THE MEN IN THE NEWS —Straight Talks to Them—By Nixola Grecley-Smith- ie ie Sa The FIFTY GREATEST _ - EVENTS in HISTORY By Albert Payson Jerhune, | No. 29.—Henry of Navarre, and the Making of Modern France, TRY boy—long rather than tall, high o: with a great hooked rehend, | : & hoes, & tanned face and wiry frame—came up to Parte, againat he Mother's will, one day in the inter part of the sixteenth century, He [Kis the penniless Prince Henry of Bearn, gon of stupld old Antony of Bourbon, is of Navarre. Ip coming to Parte he was walking very Jawa of death Catherine de Medic!, widow i “ r of France tn Ie Of the fect thar hor weakabon Charles 1X She had four oa, They were all childless, Bhoult they <t hetre [the royal line of Valols would end and the ocession, to i r Navarre. Cather { Catholic, aa ware ber sons anit teh frontier ‘The rule | Neverre mote Navarre, a little wubskliary Was the centre of the Huguenu chief of the Huguenow ¢, if the King of one, France would probatly become a Huguenot ity eyes torwanl the litte kingdom anf Degan te & powsibtinty ‘de Bk near the Bpane testant) movement, H Jeanne d'A |Navarre, was | was of the nob mn emia Unlok-hendoc own... and mother |} Two Women and then him, ad miliuary trainin, r a Admiral Collany Thelr Plots, Hy uch means she hoped to make him « good man Te nd 8 wit povore and to #ve tum from the immoral, cofrupt influences of hie day, In the midst ures of training Jeanne waa horrified to receive a request from Catherine that Henry via the gay court at Pans. Bhe well knew that such @o invitation amounted to @ royal command, and that k could not with impunity be disobeyed. Yet she foresaw the terribie influences « woman like Oathertne could exert on her pleas th many motherly directions aa to hie conduct and repetitions d taught him ehe let him ry, delighted to be free hurried to Paris and plunged ‘mt once into the dissolute ne in vain tried to retain her imfuence over him by of advice and of news of id Catherine lottera so ahe sent Jeanne « pair of polsoned gloves, Jeanre wore them and died Pe ew. influence being thas removed ‘thé infamtes of Catterine’s contrivance. He was now King ¢ head of the Huguenots, but too steeped in the pleasures thought to his responaibiiities, To wipe out the Husuen the maseacre of S Bartholomew within a week after Hon daughter Margaret. Henry, aretog hia life waa in ¢ fam and became @ Catholic. Three years was treated more like a prisoner than @ king, ‘end Hugusrot adherents were awa n the WA renounce Cau Jeter a@ faithful ret c | few years he thdulged Impovertshed * Henry wallowed deeper daily tn Navarre, nominal rt to give muoh arranged afford, and varied the } | Meantime. on Chari r. to the throne of Fran eek fhippel the ‘feike of (utes “wi to the throne and started the League, an organization | seq devoted to the teligious, made up from ail sare IIL, to check this rising rev: o aaenastnated. “The rose to avenge ite leader's death and dr the King owt of Parts sensed monarch joined forces with Henry of Navarre aga. was himasl? amsAewnated in 169 Thia left Henry of Navarre ri, Prance. Onn Barters Creed Henry boldly inid siege to Parts t the League's armies at prodigt Catholics of France w Moreover, Philip Il for a Crown. Tuguenet kin to aid the League. He wanted to be a king, not a gue nd for the second time declared him- jcoear and ail France © mown Henry was tired of warfare and poverty Ma leader. abjured Protestantism n”~ true Catholic, Thijs removed the last barrier to hie Bladly acclaimed him King he entered Parts tn triumph, Bo jn 14d y abaahed at har- tng twice deceived his earlier followers by «of tatth. He drov ©, put down the by the Eatet exe and reltgiour t restants, thus vir~ for the third Gme in ife under the Huguesot banner. kreat Minister, 8 he net to work straightening out po- javoted the next seventeen years to building up the Industries ai of the coumey that had been shattered by the forty years of civil ance hed tts b He ruled wise! or the Of the people. raising the nation to heights of progress and prosperity such as 8 had never before known. ‘At the helght of bls career, May 14 1610 be was murdered by Ravalliac, « mucceeding him. | iic, bi pung #02, Louls XIIL . | tensttc. bie Pv. form an accurate idea of Henry's charecter. Personally pom ja turncoat, an Ingra! aajustadie Tellaton. pilable ‘pol oe and com es :. most Masolute, corru cin th | See Aissotute, 0 ‘a "monaren, however, he wea the moat disso! ute, cormpt court on ear of wisdom, justice and from the darkness of m " Pewuswanoreern New York Thro’ h constructive gents, France owes to Mm tte! JaarRlen to the Veht of Progrem And Funny Glasses. | By Irvin 8. Cobb. Wonder Trips Around Our Town—No, IV. th WI8 GUIDR—We have now coma Gentle hi Stranger, to the wholteale district of Manhattan, wherw | the eky-feaching structures are pietered Uiick with janudy wigne Which give back to the sun ite meme gleam of Jalmowt gold. Here it le that evAry Gay te wold encumh heer Milwaukee Ot enough D-laet shoes to mt all sah abet wade overwlin to clothe the Cans In one croma wettest y find the reworks and tn the next te prayer-books and pilaster satits, trom which fact the godly and the ungodly allke may draw a moral to adorn @ tale Pray observe that in this avotion Broadway jooks lke ® placket tn a walking skirt, Uke @ @ote th ml jumper, lke ® qruanet to a clock, all going to whow tha ¢his, our main thoroughfare, taka Ite outward ehanacter Chom the wares whieh are vended elon te fanks, ¥ | Thanks for the dissertation. But prithes, tl me of! ‘crowded portion of your tatr city. 1 euppose that youdae, am in that Jobber's doorway made Iie wtart In Ute as on terubbed the windows fo carefully that how he fee Doth oot the atary ln me Witth Reader alwaye wut j THE RUBBER he Genlzena of ¢ promperoua party oe boy, and that b artner In the business? THE WISH GUIDE—The story doth indeed ao run, but the truth muna counters wise. ‘The former office boy in yon doorway now bas an detereet In the buaineas, As you have Muessnd, but he haa if because as ® youth he wae far too wagacloun to waste his energion Washing Windows He preked at keyholes and pried tte hidden places untll he learned the Innermont secrete of the house, # that Cmally they had to take him Into the firtn in self-defense THE RUBBERNECK—And the boy who washed the windown so diltmentipes seht of shia? : THE WISH G He wanhes them yet Karly in hie cateer tt was aon | that he washed windows too well ever to be allowed to do « THE RUPRORNECK—Prithes inform mo alao rewarding the brightetmoed youthw and maidens who sarry p a and wrap bundles and run errande lg this place? THE WISH GUIDE~They be honor graduates of our public high achoolser ahining examples of the Maxwo!l syatem of modern ¢ducat{o THE RUBEERNECK—Rehold now the youth who sobs upan‘the curbetone,! the while he Garessen the bruised portions of hir oerton. Cans’ | me why he weeps? THE WI8K GUIDE—Most naaurediy, He read in the Boy's Own Magazine of the quick-witted lat who got a job by wa boldly into the boss's office with the announcement that he woe ready to start right tn, and refused to leave when © had been fied. The Janitor just got through helping him out THE RUBBERNECK—Then it would appeat we cannot always believe what the text-book and fiction writers may when they seek to point out the road to Trucoess in businewn? THE WIKE GUIDE-Not always, Fy who tried buntness and felled before the TWO-MINUTE TALKS WITH NEW YORKERS. of you #ee they turned 1 Are menerally persone revailing mode, to make the individual mo: little becom tw, | v4 lig , ¢ thet in al most of a little becomingness of} «1 ana nat ing te excelent tor! Cope charger te exceedin’ the aperd| “t mw you ahoot that man, an' 4) “Where'd you wil git dem medals By T. O. McGill, Own. the complexion lint, Yer Honor! pinch you for It, but the Tombs t# too } Hastue? ‘ Harniiys She may know perfectly wa t the wasp wafs “How tar. daitqto the Arug atoret Prisoner—I wae only wheeling # baby | full of murderers mow.” Fightin’ on Han Juan But Pop tan't 146 DUK had bewun to get tn ay ayatem, Hs perfectly ™ hat the wasp walst fs destructive of | .. Pivelleyyecgy toi “io you waa down in Cuba “ very vouch by ith inning trae yelling her health and comfort, but when It comes back from Lond 0 this sea-| sam tor | Judge~Yod forget thie 9 Philadel o fen Juan HL New York!" wae tering fon, as it is heralded to do, she will ad pt it v tall as phia, airt a es Pe. to © the base nae Ke si mveslt 4 att She may be quite aware that the trs 1 efertmentinnietiet " — ball fever any |came around 3 o'clock, # butors ft She may gui re that the tra a y than | Knew Jt I wae in the elevated. boaad ¢ TAL ’ ather Wey THAD | for tha Polo Orov t 4 and public menace, but in its revival | th FI t H. il IL Ab t It ae B Ruth Earle. Be fier peing up eel rounds. [ think 1 only ’ fi } “ rod Pames the res t 4 ‘ , as t tl tt Mien a haat wear T mnrted early and smn We ti rT; ARLOTY Ww the spice of proposing. very declaration | beach, and let me have one brtet hour of happiness! Mises Nea rh AOU 10 wet tn at all the game when above make Sifferet +h " of lOve whould be made in a differant comy corner The aun rises pow about 646 mafic shat \ ¢ oie and managed to lifference tha at a @ffereat hour, to a different giri—~bat never | “We mat beneath the glow of rose-fushed clouds. Flossie settled her white old Bartley Of towne Phe ee body wit Jesig nd the g t \ ifferent one A Kiri who la indifferent when youl Gwek suilorwult, wank upos the banch and gased rapturoumly wt the ena, I took Lenser yesterday Wor other, 1 found that Pmad on, led-always to a fresh shear of, . r Abe te your frat and only love Gonan'c Belong in the | lw bande in mine, sank down beside her and gased ramurously ln her eyes, Lesser tana “8 In every town w are the Ghat 5 ays FESR Searing det f oky of womanly womanhood | The ton wae pink a the enoramg Vght, The wavew broke with hardly « broker in onda ei Ty wite maid ia Over the Gre before. T propom only te womanly woman T've propored to | minal. ‘The some was eo epiritual that even the anipy manning af the waters and foe of thome What ct per Yr ema n fright is worse th et " fo vir and one of then. Tite marning I made the elke did wt male ene hungry, \MO-n-yenr-income New Yorkers you s poked over them FT foun ‘ Fashion fright is wo a ght. St survives any number fret in my B4th century of propossle—one of the most Whine T saw'the toy oe the rei wud JUAt peering Above the aon T knew it pony ti pear of : ine ail thy. news. that | if public appearances, So far i tims terferes Charming abd unique of them all was time to epeak. What le the DAS@bAM troutla with story Of the exchange of / with liberty and the pursult of happiness Cha rere "I've proposed by Jamplieht and wtars fot. by gantight “Wlowin’ eald 1, loved you yeaterday, 1 ove you How, Lat me love! HT me tn ay to KIN w slow | interest concerntng the family’ of sean | “agin “idbondy 2 Merefore, opposed t, And moonlight, by candialight and softwhaced electra Nem, | you torwver Tell me thet I my, as atuernoon on Labor my three years ago, pileher and I Juat how much (6 | the spirit of our institutions in America: ANd wo tt COCUSTAG to Mme IMM eveRttg AM 1 was mayiny good ‘ht de SrA ANd when hall we be watt y im ofteriee. 1 Bid nat Oven, we sata i, sballe for avery ‘amino, | it shall to follow the at | Aight co dhe prettient girl tn the hotel that propows! by "At dawn,” wad i, ‘when the work IW roseoolored in the light of the rlaing | pratemlonal ines "T Hin te wAmianion tickels and Tay atin When t shall be fashlonable t llow the distinctive, personal sty 1e| rising eunlight would oy the very pink of romance, #o | woh. ne Li Log et] Git of Walavea caaty yours to eure what it bee toa Wi etract | Hnstead of a common, levelling mode, the art of dressing well will be near 1 eaid “tt wan no wonder that { cleag forgot to get breaktawt or pay my bill, and] ago 1 hate to think of It eliing expe: arid loan in dowle 1 pit | “he fis best development, P ear | " Wionsie. “arent me thin fever. ‘To-morrow taken me fant landed my @rip and me on the rear platform of the train as it pulled out, oll, Sok se early of ae ak |Oet WO get te he warns. Tut Ive fad hig It: yelopmei | bak (0 to oo Lhe 740 empenmh Mant mie ah 6.9) See tue aed MUerhowee om she "a twaly delicious proposing ts angromtng."* eed Oe Tl anid wot own bee ¥ Bet think 1 be ohge Hx fe Silat, laning) valagoeas. by, O¢

Other pages from this issue: