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

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PR ai ET NEE a 1‘ sessment ere ee chatnten tt ere “tubtiahed New Tork b by the Press Publishing Company, No. 6 to @ Park Row, Entered at the Post-Oitice at New York as Second-Clase Mail Matter, VOLUME 47. ® NO, 16,67 PUSH CARTS. USH carts are a great convenience and also somewhat of a nuisance. They supply fruit to many people who otherwise would go without it. They save loss to storekeepers by furnishing a speedy way to dispose of perishable products. They afford a means of honest livelihod to thousands of worthy workingmen, to whom they give a practical mer- cantile training from which successful merchants arise. However much of a nuisance in many ways they may be, that fact is not a conclusive argument | for their abolition, but rather proof that the system should be improved. } As between selling food on pushcarts in open tir, and the small cast side groceries, where the family Aves ina com:} “municatirg room and the children play about the counters, the prefer- @me on sanitary grounds is for the pushcarts. A reform of the pushcart system should include also a change in the present methods of tenement-| grocery stores. | sya several years The Evening World has advocated the alg ment of public markets and the transfer to them of the sale of perishable | food products. .Sucl. things as milk, fruit and meats must be kept under sanitary conditions if their wholesomeness is to be preserved. It is im-| possible for a small storekeeper to have atlequate col storage rooms, "complete severance of the food from contamination: and such clean su Toundings as will avoid filth. es U L224 DOOD APRON pHOOLOODD ODOODIDdADDON00 The plan to establish east side markets by private enterprise is better a public system, provided it is comprehensive. By having cammon Gold storage rooms the expense of the individual market man would be geduced.. The loss from spoiled goods would be diminished, inspection * by the Board of Health be made ‘more easy and New York's food supply ould ‘be improved. Every step toward this end is commendable. ’ WHISKEY AND NEAR WHISKEY. HAT has hitherto been sold-as whis- key is henceforth under the Pure Food law to be classitied. Foltow- , ing an elaborate opinion by the At- ! torney-General, the President is approved the details of the Secre;| tary of Agriculture's plan for " classifying and labeling. There are henceforth ta be four must be labelled accurately. First is straight whiskey, which the At- A torney-General learnedly called Semper idem. Semper Idem is the Latin for “always the same.” This is a pure, straight whiskey, and all the contents of the bottle must have een distilled at one time and sold without artificial coloring. The age- fag must be natural. : Sam Whenever pure whiskeys are mixed the bottled goods are to be} ; “marked “Blended Whiskey,” which the Attorney-General calls “FE Pluri- © bus Unum,” which means in English “one made out of many.” The z |) third whiskey is a compound in which whiskey is mixed with neutral | or piratic appearance. a © epirits. This is the common barroom whiskey as now sold. @o the middle types generally a man The Day of Rest. By Maurice Ketten; PEACE! PEACE! You MusT NOT TREAT oRITCHEN- You MOLLY - COpoLe ; ONE JOHN, You MUST PUT THAT fou must Now you're SHE'S on Coo OUT. SHE HAS oe. /& PRACTICAL MAN ‘ DEAR, FINISH Your’ OAY DEMENTIA AMERICANA Ft | ye Got tof \SINEMEA Beate nce kinds of whiskey, all of deed bite Wife’s “‘Ideal’”’ Husband. & 4 J By Nixola Greeley-Smith. LADY who left her husband and permitted him to hero, though later she might have taken unto herself a red-headed husband and obtain @ divorce from he was not her ideal and her “intellectual life was limited with him" ts now ing to annul his divorce and Women's ideais ord shape trom the charact An ideal of ironclad dime & household, and !f the husband & Incubus the prospects of agreemen if they were part of the jury in a New York murder trial Every young girl has, of co tions of what her ideal man is le fuct about these {deals ronment extremes ~—he Bowery whiskey comes under class four. The preceding classes | more gf him. 1 suppose no girl's One girl may dream of a brur of a bine-eyed, bond nd ir recause}loved him devotedly, rertiggoran fe awcvgitpicaac An adjustable ident that takes on the face and character of the actual hue- -|band or wife, us, !f {t is the ideal of a man or woman genuinely in love, it e.{must, Is a Soy to the posse and a flattering delight to object. It is the and take their unel, yare k sort of tdeal that, when brought into the howsehold and : applied ruthie to all the Httle Incidents of daily Ife, creates unhappiness. "thing to take into The wife who finds her ntallectual 6 anita mith bighaealta Naot ay ca pat won! is the most pith on of arrogance and iqnor- O88 ADA BAHU ORT ay er now er met @ husband whose wife patronized him, talking his “different” and tnferentially lower tastes, of his disiike for lectures on and dis aversion to grand ‘opera; who was not infinitely tnferior to the man she criticised, and I have never met an “ideal” of a woman of this k whom she would not, had she the misfortune to be married to bim, be compelled ort ee certain hasy concep- be like, and it is a re- that they hatred poet deals, altho Let your ideal be a vi around the character of your actual husb: ries, because or wife by wa ) t sn unbending yardstick by whjch he or ol ever circled about a red ded|to be measured and found wanting - e fe required to be distilled from grain, but class four is any mixture —| key, or imitation whiskey, and must be labelled as such. It can be com- : | Pounded in any manner the maker yiBesires, provided that the poison- ‘tous ingredients accurately appear lon the label, the same requirement | which applies to, labelling of drugs. The purpose of these regulations fs not to interfere in any way with the purchase of compound or imi- tion whiskey by the public, if Uw desire to buy, but to prevent le of near whiskey as pure whiskey and to enable every purchaser “to know what he really is getting. By successive rulings a system of | Similar classification and labelling wil) be applied to all other interstate | drinks. | j Twe Fares.’ omy wt decame cold and indifferent v ening World toward me,,and knowing of no reason How often haye you entered & surface | for being so treated I at last asked her ear, paid your nickei and five mi what the trouble waa 6he| Mater bad the avetor ask you for itted that her mother had potnted | Your fare the sec me? You #8¥ | out faults which whe had never noticed you paid your fare—he ways Weil tn me. J told my wife at leat that her | fils word is as good as yours, 80 whet! mother would have to go, but she re- | Spe You so do? Tay axain or xet off7| fused to ilsten to me and when } Mee com, “Ask for your trans tid ber that etther her mother or pees eee ines for 7 t jt Mou ave sto she answered that fer when You pay your fare.” and ¥ mother would hot go. The next aa $6 @ wood idea. | take a transfer f to New York (my tome is in every nickel ! pay to the conductor and uses) and have beeg here hen whe be arks for» & Md W Tiphow my receipt The Moders Girl. ‘ 0 ier wiles ‘eo gs under the preceding definitions. Thom pson’s Nig ht Out ire) G2 &2 GD By W. 1B Steinigans I HAVE JUST if Goose BLINKINS 1 ery RoR. | | TORE me THOMPSON mo hy ANAT par SHOW HI ~~ \y ||] AH, THERE'D RIGHT IN} ‘ THE FOSTER “ THERE'S NO GAMBIT! PLACE LIKE W YOURE AT, CIRCUS? ; — — Se ee TRL aR Tr 5 ait 5 YOUR WIFE Letters from the People. iss" 2bop- 2 | to live with her and aie, méthout discussing the | for rejeottan of my article fonfidences reposed hem n| Well.” anid the eittor . place, it te wrtlien on bow | paper” “Purely @ miner fault.” ‘Pinase give mo frankly f E. J. C’a Lotter concern: | ‘ shine Wortd tnd Diteaidapes ue teearded? Giris, 1 een tnetined to be: | » H.W ¢ tne not mingled with | - - ety uMoclene ° r | Another " ; Boer Me Hh ay | qaemaneneterepampeneeers oo le wae. Béitor of The Ervesive Word * we enather ste” dicts| A DOUBLE-ENDER Dare. Z. ake if her mother should jcoulng int | the reason mn the firw wies of the ford to| “Hut on fending i 1 wee unable to ve Detter | taco NM should have been = aa either ‘side’ bulindatitte Led: HOPES SHATTERED. | A GOOD REASON. A NEW ONE. I have called,” began Myr. Nervey| "Bo, after being se long undectded be-| “Ma,” eald young Miss Nuriteh, when » Por rag 0 epenk vy about your tween the two, you have taken James we was at the Yellowstone Mhrk dia Aaughter. Of course, you must bave io preference to WHIT What decided) we see all the geywerm Mat was there?’ noticed? that there is something b@| you, Jessio? "Yes, my dear, ed Mr, Nu tween use Well, James tas lately secured «| stich, “we seen al! Ghd @tngs thet was “No,” interrupted Mr. Hoxley, "Bit | position as travelling salesman, and as| there, Why!" Pa ayre there will be pretty eoon.” 64° will go ail country 1! "Because 1 heard wt Mr. Dinkerkopt co another traey ther the ner it the pea a Fon sense juan fr my Sit ali Sree wil the srentant f if ‘ ei Dab The Evening World's Daily Magazine, Monday, April | |maw her with another fellow and de lolded she was not true. Kindly astruct | twenty-one A few months ago 1 at- BS a iri bes © conten : AS RICT es SIXTY HEROES Albert Payses Terhune. No, 39—-GEORGE WASHINGTON, the Hero Who Freed America, N an earlier series the story of George Washington and of our countrys | splendid struggle for freedom was told in full. Yet no recital of the > careers of world heroes can be complete without at least a brief tale of | {the exploits of the hero-patriot to whom Ameriea ewes her Hberty and grealness, 2 iy | A handful of colontsts—poor, scattered, untrained In war—dared td ~/ defy one of the most powerful, richest kingdoms on earth. That they’wom j jthe terribly unequai struggle was due to one man’s prowess, And that maw was George Washington. That the new nation, impoverished, inexperten and without a precedent whereon to model itself, came triumphant out the chaos following the war and grew tnto what %t {s today is due to the same man. i When the French and Indinn war broke out the Governor of Virginia sent Washington, then a mere boy of twenty-dne, with a message of protest to the French commandant. The youth made the perilous journey of 600 jmiles across trackless wilderness, in dead of winter, braving death from [the elements, from savage tribes atid wild beasts, This feat drew all eyes upon him, byt {t was more than duplicated soon after, when, s¢rving as alde } to stupid Gen. Braddock, he saved the latter's {ll-commanded army from total annibiliation. Braddock in th® summer of 1754 led a force of British regu- lars and’ Virginta riflemen against the French Fort du Quesne (Pittsburg). _ He was ainbushed by French and Indians and killed. His army, would have been massacred but for Washington's skill in extricating them from the | ambuscade When {n 1775 she colontes resolved to beamBritish oppression no longer, Washington was chosen Commander-in-Chief of the small, ill-armed, un- drilled bands of refruits. By his sheer per- ————~—————~» sonal genius he transfermed the rabble into a |$ Transforms Rabble disciplined army capable of fighting as could Into Army. no regular soldiers of Europe. Then began wenn) eight years of war, wherein Washington 80 « managed his little army as to win the praise of the world. His men were no match {n for the English. He hail no adequate means of levying fresh troops, edk hor treasury where- with to buy them food, arms or equipment. England had boundless wealth to draw from; Washington, by avelding needless encounters, by retreating and luring on the enemy, and by striking lightning blows where such blows were least expected, kept the British ever in suspense, averted any ad- Vantage their superior numbers might give them, and made the war 60 expensive that the English people finally clamored for its close. England had at first looked forward to an easy victory. But she found a foe who defied all traditions of war; who would not stand up and be crushed by welght of numbers; who-hadanirrliating way-of eluding-cap- and of winhing victories at times when all military tactics pointed to impossibility of suc! thing. At first Washington had no idea of a permanent break witn England. He fought, not for separation from the mother coun but to teach that country to respect the colonists’ rights. Then, finding so moderate a course no longer possible, he cast in his lot for berty, At Valley Forge, when his men starved and froze in pitifully bad winter quarters, he suffered with the poorest soldier. His was the brain that devised the amazing plan of crossing the tce-choked Delaware and . swooping down on the powerful force of Hessians at Trenton. Up to that (me the Hexsians had been thought invincible, Washington proved they could be beaten, and thus cleared away one mare bugbear from the path to success, Sneered at by England, doubted by many of his own mén, the object of More than one conspiracy, he still kept on in the line of warfare he had planned out. Then, after years of mingled hope and despair, came the cli- max of the war; the surrender of Cornwallis in the trap Washington had baited for him at Yorktown; and the final glorious winning of American freedoril. But now that the war was at an end our country found {tself almost as badly off as before. There was no money in the treasury, the soldiers ‘ clamored for pay, there were a dozen different PLC LISD LD suggestions as to the way t Bullds Union Dinette oct should be run. Chaos and anarchy were im- Out of Chaos. minent. The nation was in the position of a ry ¢ man who has won his way out of prison only pi to find himself penniless and without home, occupation or recognized position, In this haur of doubt, many clamored that Washington be chosen king. He rejected the proposition with anger. He had fought to free his country, uot to make {t a monarchy. Yet, at the pleading of the nation, this man who had won Iberty for America and who fn the evening of his days deserved and longed for rest, consented to be President. For eight years he Guided the Ship of State, « overcoming all diMculties, setcing the Government on a firm basi, making the United States respected from one end of the world to the other. Hay. ing di ss much for his country {n peace as formerly he had achieved in = war, Washington refused a third term and retired to private Mfe. Dying tn 1799, he left for future ages an example of bure patriotism untarnished by private ambition, and a name that stands forth pre-eminent in the world’ honor roll of heroes, at nin nny %, ——Ten Ways———_ ; ue Make a Woman Care for a Man By Margaret Rohe. ] No, 1—Talk to Her About Yourself, ALK of yourself. Tell of the fatal ¢ ponsens Admit that you are beautiful and eah't help being so. Don't make @ agcret of your bravery, Assure her you are a good singer, and have Bone! and Caruso looking Ike amateurs Jet her gather that you are the whole works at the office nation the girls all say you Speak of your well known critical attainments. Reast all thevactors. Give her to understand how much better you could play the parte Then into your etride thos I could act? Dear me, yes. 1 om formance. Frohman was crazy But of course 1 wouldn't th “Ob, didn't you know ea hit at @ college per- set me. So was Belasgo, Mink of acting for a living. You meet so many common people in that business. I. hate common people, Young Vanderbilt was speuking about this very thirig at tee club not an hour ago, He said to me, “Say, old chap, tiow js It you are eo doowla exclusive? he said. ‘Ho he sald, ‘you «# quainted with I ever maw, really you are, old fe: » 1 want you to know some friends of mine.’ Well, of course, I ean't go around making indiscriminate acquaintances, so I Just had to excuse myself. “T hope I didn't hurt Van's feelings. 1 wouldn't for the world wound aay one. T am too considerate, miy friende tell me. +l have always put others bec fore myself. 1 don't know how you feel about tt, but I can't stand ® person ‘who \s always thinking of himeelf and talking of himse¥. 1 alwa try te put myself in the Background, be « sort of a listener instead of « t er. “My friends aay I really ought to have more | for myself; they hate» ft Ave me ao silent. Pardon me for repeating it, but they say 1 talk really well AAS-thas we eel would, I could keep an entire company entertained for hours ith witty stories and bright acco ‘ Phos etd oat tei unte of my travels, Oh, yer. didn't I tell you Don't afraid of continuing thie strain for another hour +2. Betty Vincent’s « > # « Advice to Lovers. A Jealous Youth Plane and have started a ran book . cliopings about him Dear Be! AM eighteen years olf and met ‘a young lady seventeon at a party #ix as he desire months age Anovher young n | fections and attentions fo took her heme that night. 1 fell in love | (xe. him with her the minute I saw her We be Wise, at came @ wen Led, nd I wont with her and think for three months and made iwra pres: | i" Know thot ’ a0 Me ent Of a ailver-Jocket for Christmas. 1| ¢ w depuis mere undoubted}y very foolleb aout the actor on BROKEN-HEARTED BOW. | an who loves sim cause t Cal) -09 tar and tell her you "8"! Asking to Call, Admires An Actor. avin ly you kindly tet me whether f¢ Dear Betty is proper for ® Youn man to AM @ moung lady, twenty years old, to call, or whether he should be nd am engaged to « youns mun Of) asked to cally GAL jme what to do. as I want to make up tended & matings \ became very u WHO MADE HISTOR B 9

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