The evening world. Newspaper, January 15, 1907, Page 12

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Dails Magazine, Tuesday, “15, 1907. =o “papliahed by the Press Pubttahing Comp: F 0 . Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. WOMUMES7icricecccsrsesnece JNO, 16,583. i THE SPEED LAW. . A chauffeur has been sentenced to jail for persisting in Speed law. ‘There should be many others. The reck —-speed-automobiles thro i}-streeisof New Y great nervous Strain to the already too high tension of living Jaw-probibils Land ij should Automall 3 sandealt the hansen ofthe more people than they killed z iteurs theiiSelves-are ‘ths cause the grow} ‘ \ of highways and streets will ill needlessly interfere with th ontent-to-conduct themselves decently: "Stitt, how can thé c mobile'is due. -Phe-at From the City Hall high-speed au i$ no unusual sight for an automo- bile owned by the city of New York and operated at the taxpayers’ ex- pense: to be. seen racing along Je- tome avenue or Riverside Drive or through the park, filled with a ca- rousing gang, swearing profusely at some new policeman who may seek kind of an example to other chauf- feurs, Z 4 ern—_what-public- business: the automobiles- of “heads of “departments are engaged in, roaming around at night. with women passengers. Surety the Fire Department's automobiles cannot —-be-on their-way to-a-fire-every-timethey-go-to-or-from-suburban-hotels or stop in front of upper Broadway resorts, And, with the exception of automobiles being operated at a speed of ihirty or forty miles an hour. It was recently proposed in the Board of Aldermen that all the city’ biles used. by private business concerns. The influence of. powerful pub- lic officials prevented this proper regulation. The Board of Aldermen “should insist upon it. As.legitimately that the city treasury be drawn upon for payment for the drinks, dinners and suppers of public officials, as for the operat- any possibte-use-on public duty. — If these-municipal-automobiles~ are ———used-only—during_working_hours, many public officials_must_be_giving double the legal time to their official duties. count be-weltto-make-a-test case of the superiority of (ie dangerous speed is prohibited by the laws of New York, and no excep- tion is made of ill-bred public officials.” So outrageous has become their @nduct that they deliberately bait new traffic policemen and after lead- —{ng-a-faithful police subordinate on-a long chase they flash a gold badge at him and pour out a torrent of that brand of profanity w! raised above their station in life are so often addicted to. Somehow, also, these free automobile rides tend to develop a sor -of arrogant snobbishness among-a ehass of-men-who-were-hitherto reasoii =ably-well-behaved-in-pubtic. Both should the .autom: shoukt-have-ta afot Letters from_the People. She Wants the Details, To the Eaitor of The tye: MON Kad Keepy a WA Piety ot fea, rent, payn for aves $3 2 mont Bellare fe I would y help me any? tt? | after the race tracks ant pool answer soon. s axe Ticket Spec I read your editorial Ytion, The city of heard, hai passed an cerning this evil It ticket, offered for sale mu ed on the cace of same that it could not be sold fo that price, and at the box office gto branch £0; tun by the under penalty of heavy fines for each offense, This scems to cover the ground, | The Ditterence. Why not look tt up? con, |1 Apply to Department of Charittes, Foot of East‘ Twenty-nixth street Mo the Editor of Th venting Is there any possible way fo California tree? The + fe that I have deen made wintem we have here » pelicd to give up my positic Uke to go to a w fayen't the 1 y in a woll-k 1, {In West One Hundred and 1 street I refused to tip a wal the arm of tho S' present and if e do they hay: ® pare and where do Society WU Help You, ‘Tam a doy of sixteen, ayRhaye been | pitron out of the place. eaieed sor eny remeriabie talent én act- The Hurry-Up New Yorker. | MAKING A START IN LIFE, — By Maurice Ketten. | NO. 24—-WHEN HE GETS A DIVORCE. any, No. 62 to 62 Park Kow, New York Say! You'RE WORSE THAN MRS NAGG TIRED OF LIVING THIS , PUNK LIFE. LUG ET A DIVORCE AND A MEMES E FOR THE iv —& COUNTER- jolating the s driving of high- j A Series of Anthentic Guides to Those Who Wish to Seleat ke opposed to reckless-over-speading. To] nt legislation, which ¢ of automobile owners who are fleurs_of ‘private owners be ‘blamed; when public officials and municipal employees set the example of law detiance? ~-THANKS~Good MORNING — every one of them rushes |, “Tae BACHELOR madly around, régarcless of the law] b or-the safety of: private citizens. “It INCOMPATIBILITY, | | | | | id stop them, and setting’the worst] | tog f WELL PLU BE JIGGEREDI D0 You TAKE THIS WOMAN TOBE Your. he-Fire Department_thereis-no_possible -valid_reason_forthe municipal Ar any one who wants to follow = career where there ts opportunity tor | automobiles should be labelled at Teast as ‘conspicuously as the automo-| -ing-expenses of their automobile pleasure trips. The mileage far exceeds' quafnt and familiarize himself with all the details of every branch of the busf- ‘pants “of thes: municipal automobiles to the speed law. Excessive and| Electrical Engincer » * Chef * * Broker * * Locomotive Engineer Salesman * * (" W/HHIAT WOULD * * Plumber Designer. -* + YOU * Physician $ Detective * « (xe TO BE?) * * Motorman Stenographer * * * Chauffeur x * * Artist * * * Music Teacher ets beet ect * * Teacher. Lawyer! * * a Career, Giving Information Concerning Qualifications; ; * Opportunities, Earnings, &c., in the Different Trades and Professrons. By T. ©. McGill. oy THE PHOTO-ENGRAVER. ~~ | Pesce. —One who is skilled in the methett of* reproducing photographs, drawings or pictures on the rface of metal plates hy photographic and +dhem-+ ical grocesves for the purposes of printing. Age.-Phe dest age to besin the career of a. photo- j engraver sis eighteen years, although therd are many CrUlty to che TAKS Who;are thirty und oven ant whelt © the photo-ensraving processes first became practioalemany, | mature men took to tha trade with great enthusiasm.’ Wages.—An aprrentice tecelyes from $3 to $5 q@ysreek, ber," where the pay Ja from $12 to $18 a week. A Journey; Yoot recaved $4 to $6 4 day. Pirnt-class. copper etchers.and ,| 2 hand tool men gt as high ex $2 a week in the Job shana, and good foremen recelye from $25 a weok to $75. q Hours, of Labor There aro few places in the United States where a photo~ engraver has to work more than elght-hours without being pala overtimie.ané’ , \ where the trade grganization exists etght hours ts the rule. Equipment.—To_begin_the_carsar_of_a_phota-engra¥er—reqilres little relee than plain common sonse, One must know how to read and write and,becabdle to caloulate in'the figures on a two-foot rule. Requirements.—In the Eastern cities where unlons preva!l a photo-engravst ToT unowed to carry a Tor more Urin one brave of the work, of sehich here #re five. These are: Photographer, film layer, etoher, router, and finisher or engraver, This moins that @ man must De prosiclent in mechanical vho- | phy, the handling of photographic films, the etching of the metal, tha sat on of the plate by routing, and the Anishing touches_of the engraver; ao cording. to.the card he carries: and-ho.ts not required to-know anything €iees60 aecure work: but @ photo-engraver who has not made Mtmself proficient ta Wl these branches, and who {s not able to take a drawing or a photograph and reproduce tt-on-a metal plate, rout {t and set this_on the ‘‘hlock™ ready. to. 0 on. the press fox printing, not-yery progressive, and will never eet-very high: ta the profession. It {s well to state that there are very fow women photo-engrarers, indivkiual effort that of the photo-engraver offers many attmetive chances, The art, or trade, has not yet reached the zenith of its tmportance. Whit tt has been. made economical compared with whac ft was fifteen years aga, opportunities for improvement in rapidity of methods and curtaflment of cost are just as great as ever. ¥=F \nide from that there {8 the constantly Increasing derhand for {Illustrations newspapers and books, and there is no real reason why thts demand should ¢ % be less. To etart as a photo-engraver @ person must go to one of the few schools or apply to-some Job ahop for work es an apprentice or as a helper tf he has had | previous expeHence, and await his turn for m vacancy, “All concerns not cori nected with newspapers are classed as job shops. There‘is # union rule of oro apprentice.to-six_men, butt fs not rigtdty enforced = = Saar cert After obtaining a positton as nn apprentice a boy should make haste to-ac— neas.—There-_ts-no-reason why he shouldn't da tila, f6e--# j an apprentice has more leeway for learning the diffe! ent branches than a man who has taken up the work “as a journeyman. ‘he newspaper offices, where the work must be rapid and sa perfect-as_possible, do néty take Apprentices in their“ photo-engraving departmentas > When an engraving department like that of The Evening World ts keyed up to the task of “rushing « page or halt-page out of some big news event—aay, mak- | ing a half-tone reproduction of a photograph of @ railroad wreck—and the next edition of the paper Is only forty-five minutes off, It can easlly be understoo that {t ls no place for apprentices. It usually_takes-an-ayverage photo-engrayar twenty minutes to put a-half-tono picture through one of Drocesses it mugt PIESUEDUS TSE TUS An Apprentice’s ~~ Chances. Don’t Be a Heart-Shaped Person. % % By Nixola Greciey-smith. | pass through, to say nothing of the other three. ‘It fe considered very quick work tke love approaches, thelr sudden sinking when may—like fluttering when some-one-we. PD os TeavasnieYateuuaantertyaminutess = The dear girl who ts sentimental, and doesn't-mind admitting the-tact, have all the accessories of her tollet table heart-shaped. Tables of that soul Our hearts, however, which have a defnito shape, gts us far tesa concern} an our |maginations, that take the form of any {dle object to which they at- ach themselves. So long as a young Man can took at Mabel ind think, according to the familar formula, that her eyes are blue a ne need not worry about himself part destin in white enamel, with mirrors of the game form, are seen now In some 0 the excluatve stores In_Fifth avent ‘ or Ethel or Vieia offer. ‘This work {a done by men who-have a thorough kmowtedge of the Tower | grades of the work and who have developed a mechanical as well as artistl: | F the dear girl addr ghen |! yand woodln > Grecks-sotigit{ SP Mnishers or engravers, = For work such aa {sdone In the color pages of the Sunday World many e: 0 LABloppy sea of woman of to-day the imnginatl rts-tor many things for wh! Tgatons should ate_people are born without this su n seem more desirable than all the world, out of trouble, the sentimental sisters with whom I} {n_soma_cases. and they lead plea one man or wom ant, uneventful I Those with {maginations and hearts, Afoss an aM@Jlation, seo the earth not as an oh) lraphers make {t, but as a gigantic heart, y nerd no dressing table arrangements to keep before them Wiis enrid neues toward ther: we BY E. F. Flinn. gk table, as sho had turned for our hearta ts tn our own breasts Moly = ton fatten: [eee Tater forest t care to be reminded save ‘by their bird. ‘te when they can. Mr. and Mrs. Pinch. . [HARRY T oee tHay TROVATORE’I5 ON To-nIGHT OPERA House I. you TROT BY the Prema Petter g Company Ty Hewoy, MA SwELLGUY! we'Re JUST ADMIRING THE GOWNS, ETc. WED BETTER STAND AROUND THE LOBDY WHiLe THE CROWD GOED IN, AND THEN SKIP uP, TE-GUR GALLERY SEATS! GRAND OPERA COMES PRETTY HIGH, CREAR, BOT iF ypu REALLY. WANT T0G0 © CAM STAND THE GAS COLLECTOR OFF FoR Aw FORA weet -(ow pe you oo fx Ioseo that Mr. Jerome ts going to get” some THE REAL CRITICS GO Te THE GALLERY !- THANKS, WE Wit CUIN YOU FORA wre You CAN HEAR THE Music TO MUCH BETTER ADVANTAGE In THE GALLERY, YOU KO. T HOPE NOBODY harged iin dn the spot. ~Lelleying | ould at least get satinfaction from he manager, I returned to ‘the samo ace to dine a few nixhty~later. To my surprise I found the “discharged” ply for Mombership. waiter on the Job. Ils discharge had| » Me the MAltor of;"The' Byenins World: Jastod only os long as {t takes to7ger a] | STANDARDS OF SUCCESS, A Coming Industry. n Important product tn the United States, At} present, however, there are probably not more than 1,000,000 pounds of It comes from the back of the Angora goat, going backward, and that's something,’ | thtee or four pounds’ belng secured from/pach animal, The price yarles from —Pulledelphia Public Ledger, i culosis than other European capitals, In 194 it was only 163 por. 100,000 OWAIR ts ikely to becom ile held her on hty lap, But now he underatands Ilis sad migtake, poor’ chap! got ber on hb hand —Cleyeland Leer, <n plodder ts apt to ‘Well, sometimes he succeeds tn not the substance grown hero, {38 cents to $125 a pound The superior class of work that ts demanded by the high-class. {llustrated— publication makes the higher grades of the work attractive tn the rewards they | sense from contact with art that enables them to put the soft and deft touchns | (ight ahd shade into the web of the metal with an” engraving (ool after the hug been-made- These men ero really expert engravers and ‘ure known yers mre required to get the exact juxtaposition of each plate of col: “the—othetie Bomt-of-the_cotor_pages ot the BUbaAy pert fim Ia © World require a8 many as eight plates, each the size of % Expertness Is a page, and all have to be treated by hand. When a { Required. “double-page tiustration ts used, aa Is-often the cage, th fits adjustment of the different plates must be as neat and perfect as {f !t were a simple one-column cut! wRouting,” which means the -mechantcut process of taking off the surta aman Boers = Fade the eehin lre— lke revolving burr around the eyes and noses of the people in the pictures. ‘The etcher has tho hardest work of all. Ho haa to stand over a cradle fillet with a mixture of acids and slowly wash tt back and forth over the mstal on which the picture has been photographed and fixed by baking. The work (s tedious and requires constant attention to see that the acid does not oat top much. The fumes of the acid are Very trying, and the dust from the powdered dragon's blood used in protecting. the-metat- that must not bo etehed ts annoying to the lungs. Ea Not-a Pleasant ‘The correspondence schools do not att photo-engraving, but there are private schools whore the , theory-and practicat work ure taught for a fee ranging trom 100 $250 for, 9 co} baddies of narnyers’ Unton, aouthcaat eorer-of Reekmag: from aix weeke to alx nt-the-haadquarters. of. the street and Park Row, this city cee bereaetins ado By Walter A. Sinclair. Sy Tf all their ratiroad tracks were his and all the ratlroad cars, nged to htm, the earth, stars, sun and moon, ry person on {t was this gentleman's raccoon— a8 {s to say, provided that he owned the moon,’ stars, earth, ch then, would you figure, Mr. Harriman was worth’ _. Put-doren siz—no; vetter not; Put doton even stoves red-hot, Even if by burns you're urged Or that store-toill soon. be “merged { $ $ $ sts} If all the Soyen Seas Were merged and Mkewise each small Jako, aH ev'ry pond and river, how much water would that make? wmv |! to float his many bonds and water all his stocks? pees Wa Bnough to “put in soak" each Ine which he so freely hocks? Pee Enough to flood the market and to overflow each pool? t Hnough to keep the smould'ring tires of righteous anger cool? i ( Put dow»—nothing yow would keep, : We are all his lambs.and shcep, wets Shearing Morgan, Hil and Gould, While the rest are pooled and fooled s s $ § ANSWER to what went before: There ain't go'n' to be no core, | fz all the world was Harriman’s, and all the moon and stars, If all thesé worlds be Wi a rrr gyre cna : Fogs and Health. OTWITHSTANDING Stn fogs, London has a lower mortality from tabap inhabitants, as against 27.5 in Berlin, 24 in Milan, 256 in Madrid, Sid im ‘Vienna, 283'1n Paris, $f in Afoscow, eee 2

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