The evening world. Newspaper, October 20, 1906, Page 10

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SEE C0 2,FUNNY GLASSES LPVIn §. Cobb ~ iy, No. Entered at the Port-OMmce at New York ws Second-Ciass Mail Matter. VOLUME 47 WAGE-EARNING WOMEN. Matamony—should bev “sion is not meant the phys eeme=Sabine-wives, and wi 2 The Dear Unfair Sex Again. Pus consider, for example, a-woman, Just am age, everyday woman. ch a woman al , natural nd instinctively, open a diction ary atthe Zs," to -gee-how-tre plot-ended-tn-the-fist — chapter. T ee ee WHAT ARE YOu TOO Oy 7) 2. (a) ~— {8 Woman goss calling. If she’s rich she goes in 2 carriage; if not rich tn a hired cab that costs more than the carriage, the same being om radoxes of or Island: She wears 1 a he-dressmaker admitted was bts life's The: bil, hat, when presented to caused him to’ shriek for help, sink twice, sin; go-tnter-fof-the test ‘ox—and did you “but would readily: understana foxes a to wear their e circumstance is even more destr ndpoint that the e 1 tot It is from this s €iming- occupations is. most r Why {s-it that only the ve own skins this winter covered with shame, street. Réason;—Her jown Broadway {n-& a bird that doesn’t her fully as mueb Her clinging gown At her throat is @ midway of her erm, The institution which holds society together i means has been devised to provide for the continua: F-~ Were the mortalit ramong all children as great-as in fours © =~ orphan a umSand the other places echikiren 2 than their own parents a few generati td {© of the human race: =F he-protest-av cles beginning to-day in The ' of thousands of other young women ability to express their thoughts than Miss Magi and likewise feel a personal wrong in their limitati : ! It is not natural that millions of women should spend their lives in wage-earning occupations, but as conditions are in the United States it is impossible for many of these women to live without working for wages. -———The-common mistake made in-the-consideration of this problem is —to-regard it asa matter of morals instead of economic: | Working for wages is as honorable ard prai: sinaman. If implies nothing morally one fee than ina man. To involve woman's wag "(esaeulurs theimportant facts. * AND To Th SHE WANTS To woTR! cared-_for by oth he diminution ons We makes in her series of arti- beth Magi ening World is inevitable. There are tens , perhaps less gifted in their e aspirations & WW TSN N and above the tops of her giove ink bare elbows show. ‘Her hands nide the rr one of those square envelopes that a wedding { omes in ‘ . 5 shirt sleeves and sald nders we would r the official ourlo- y to an upholstered Pecans. Put we accept with- muft keeps her warm, 1 > a corset as stern and ng meal tickets at one of John-bi did-on-two-palrs 1 bad case of kernels, an The Evening World’s Daily Magazine, Saturday> October 20, 1906. | f Het pee HORS GR the mans, Her wrists are ike a runaway mille if she only had one toa "Few people work voluntarily at any of the Cackwar's lady wife in a supple, jewel nose-ring In one delicate are just as useful aw And then-our sn races certainly do dres¢ be nkles, y the ms, and perhaps not so to herself that these ba ndishly ree Aa THE FUNNY PART women and some men cor that the sex should be al By Walter A, Sinclair... Towed’ to vo: Mar HE are-scared,-tor too iong-they-have-tar ae Air co, rie girls, bibbed and tuckered, have Ips nicely pu ered rod smacks are parri ronecks hurt—the word of AS womanhas-as much right to mon yas -ARan—a_grea} deal mor. ~~ according to the feminine point of view. A woman certainly needs fc | Il girlies ‘are ‘next-pert,— wa « Advice ‘to Lovers, meeting two tulips not the work ¢ and clothing and shelter quite as much as a man. “If she cannot ce we ot aonedtand chars Pine wae meh shit) Dientiontan = work: with no more: complaining. than a man: | = y se N. 5 Hee B M fi K tt Dear Letty Bae Ee a ae ue prone to find fault about their work than men | 66 U Phd N k CD) err MAA auricée etten 2 or doesn't age make any What Keeps women’s wages lower th ‘Fhe Hurry p é W Yor ér To the Office. y Se, HY. P. G. tour years, for wage-earning women are not: incres she wit, the number of women who are seek THAVEN'T CARED) = ( 7 Away for you—go skilled trades the number of meri. se TIME, THERE! (of ) TAIN AN FS ue be L-Sé CERIN A Sal AWFUL iat = portion to the employment 6 3 A Widower's Love. CHURRY NI Dear He co are-avercre the Men have centuries of es ea girl dea it twenty-two zi tiworld of—her: ————esabtitheat Thay ateke hetisr Tama widower, ified and well pn: ” — = he tified and well paid 2 asked mo fifteen pfregardi : What shatr you usc | Fa potiticw and horte wow sir] Dy all moana if you can, nis -very ~allly. It- who world she would. be Oo hid beenmar. ; that tendi, hat for fifteen years he bas ly respectable life, Your . to oppose your mar- Win the -Oliéer Than_He. Ten Tora young tate ere “and, judging from her Mehas Rent Comex: 7 nk she ast = = we Handolph—icurnal Hean GHER UP. Hounes 30 com “By Martin Green, e MAD. “tint Mr. TMughes, the Republican capt ¢ nu move to eradicate his gazizzas.” rked the Man Higher Up, yOu refer to the fact to bas refrained from having the shrubbery enikis | map srubbed. nber of the Barbers’ Union, This means that whiskers jaro issues in t 5n, Do wo want a Governor wo has to get up om his 7 | hands and knees when he tur er in bed, or do we want’a Governor who | ts | shuyes himsclt with a towel? Men who have known Mr. Hearst for years pron : Wibselputcy fas} petsg | clatm that if he had let the hair on his face grow all his fe he wouldn't hate Te tho Elter of The Evening Worl ald fa | enough {n sight now to make a mustaeho he could com! “Bunny thing about tho factal fetiago in thly campaign! We have alwaye heretofore assoclited whiskers with radlcallsm, Cartoonists invartably portray, & & rush of whiskers to-the features that looka like an explo- da regard to * Whose @tart the hen ft 4 Twould kp to Those Three Sons. | Hindu Women. Anarchists wearing ft wet | oo ee i | TO call Hindu women teorant argues | yion in a hair mattress, On the other hand, the safe, sane and conservative is jen't y nto calnt ou! £ 1 the {gnoranco tn those who say so, It! piled as a amooth individual wearlng a frock coat and a white necktie, erform this ¢ du ny y ¢ ¥ Weekd aro a little dog had In. misnomer. Not to be able t9] “Now. wo havo William Kandoiph Hearst with hia face bare, prosching ci ee weni 3 cis to tae Pdi eon read and write is a mechanical defect, | doctrine of radicaliam, and Mr. Charles B. Hughes, with his countenance “4 ss, : thle Bie 4 : . notan InteHectual o How can these | penind as fine a lirsute shower aw there is extant outside of Pret, Fancehe,, hand, if s women be called “uneducated'* when | paying ante and conservative straight, place and show, also in the columns, take { a thelr dntellects have been developéd. and | jugh aid low and-oid-and-eye " ne : ae TANG es tle Laan acer Ra yeter “Should Mr. H he elected whiskers would voon play a return date in rugbun ar 1 hs of education ne in vorue g SE ores iGH " ° uy though very different from what 1g | thi# town. If tho people indore Hughes they must indorse the decoration he wears upon his vivage. After election day look out for loud cries of agony frora the barbers If Hughes géts in, Theodore Roosevelt popularized the atubby mus. kept up under the supposition that one- | tche and the slouch hat, We are an imitative people, ‘ a | halt of ‘the community ts In a state of here is one thing about Mr, Hughes's whiskers that commends them. They | barbarism? asks a writer in the Madras | aro_honest. Ho doesn't shaye s chin and wear epaulets in front of bis ears; | | Mail, How do you account, for a Hindu | nolther does he shave his uppor lip and allew/hls wind-decoys to hang suspended | woman who does not know\how to read | like the Ucense number on an Gutomobile, He 1s’ out and out with hig whiakeza, ’ tand write belng able to quote text after | Mr,-Hughes ts."" op. a all “inhuman. | known to us at Wie present day? How can the Intellect of the race ‘have been Hulgeation yx. 1 To the Wultor of The Gat nome te not. Let member) that tie Betty Vincent's .2 = wtamly ‘recelves the | text of Manu? There are Hindu women #"Do you know of any co) temporary statesman who might advantageously, Mood ts the i " ? | who know the whole code of ethica. In-| wear whiskers?’ asked the Clear Store Man, ig ° 10), ere inde ids tn femiseemoe 4 |Meed, the Hindu woman apnesin) torts ‘Tl press that,” answered the Man, Higher Up, “and make it not only advan , \ : ‘ i le understanding to be the most) tagequsly, but charitably,, As candidate for the Whisker Stakes I nominate’ tha ; <ountry where t Hatter the: fu: © preached hi hump! {| tasecusly, but charitably. ° 5 . i ~ shan Amayler his death.” |gultprea of Ber sex i ay part Of the | ron, Wulam3, Conaera, of Muftalo. : f - Seon Naammabetedatenatinnn ml bs cnatpatninhemneeniinemoretct eet Hmieentinisanamennrd (

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