The evening world. Newspaper, January 20, 1908, Page 10

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11 RRR aR NTN e Evening” worta varly Magazine, indie ne Che Hiss @Padiehea Daily Except Funday by wt arld, lishing Company, Nos. 53 to © AW, SeecTrens., tor Wee 11th Berea, | $S g0eerm PULITZER, Pres., 1 Tost One mont One month. 30 | One month... —— VOLUME 48., ——__ \ SUNDAY LIQUOR. OSTON is the wickedest city in statistics, In six mor last year there were 89.4 arrests to each thou- sand population. Unless many of the arrests were repeater this means that one out of six of Boston’s population comes annually into hostile relations with the police. Compared with Boston, Chicago is a good place. So is New York, for New York's percentage of ar- ree rests is low compared with Boston's. ( But the number of arrests Is no faithful criterion of the morality of @city. It may be a test of the efficiency of the police, or it may be Proof of the manner in which minor offenders are treated. In police statistics a drunk counts for as much as a murderer. Yet if every burglar were promptly arrested and cases of ordinary intoxica- tion were neglected the police would make a record for fewer arrests than if all important criminals were allowed to go free and everybody ‘who expectorated unlawfully or did not separate his ashes and garbage were promptly taken to the police station. One interesting fact in the police statistics of different cities is that of the the more strict the enforcement of the Sunday closing law, the more | arrests there are for drunkenness. This is similar to the experience of the local ‘where there is a prohibition law. ‘ . Prohibition and Sunday closing diminish the number of persons who @rink intoxicating liquor, but they increase the number of drinks that the | men who do drink take. If it is as much trouble to get one drink as to get a bottle of whiskey or a case of beer, many men will go without, but those who do not go without will often buy by the demijohn or keg) instead of the drink. in Northern States When only a few back rooms are running, and entrance to them is difficult, a man who gets in stays longer. This explains why there are so many Boston drunks on Sunday, for| on Sunday in Boston saloons are extensively closed. The only parts of the United States where a prohibition law js really | enforced are where the reasons are economic rather than personal. In the South prohibition has been adopted in several States and many local-| itles in order to keep the negro workmen from getting drunk and neglect ing their work. In all these localities it is rigidly enforced by white men, | who, though they may have an occasional case or jug sent to them by \r express, take pains that their crops are not neglected and their income |* diminished by allowing the negroes to become unfit for labor through ’ w \ ‘The @fstiflers and brewers have at fast begun to realize that the {| segulation of the liquor traffic must | | eome from them or the law will go |, to further extremes. If in the ‘| South distillers and brewers had ‘combined to prevent low groggeries le | Sree see Entered at the Posi-Oifice at New York @& Second-Class Ma Budecription Rates to the | Canada, Por) Evening Worid for the ur United stat Oneiyeurii: n | One year. $3.50 One y 3) 3 | the United States, according to police, ‘The Day of Rest. By Mathice Ketten. M LIGHTING YOUR iI ) PIPE, JoHN,S0 You _/ CAN HAVE A NICE SMOKE IN BED IN BED, DEAR. [WANT ‘YOu To HAVE A | RERFECT Daye REST C \ HAVE YouR BREAKFAST SS === To HE BIG <A COMPLETE RESI ARM CHAIR Now For 4 LITTLE FRESH AIR- HLL WHEEL You To THE PARIS So You'll NOTHAVE To mMonaay LITTLE HUBBY TLL READ THE PAPER (3 TIRED oF THEBED, You So You CAN GIVE VLU CARRY HIM in YouR DEAR LITTLE EYES Cee WHAT 4 \ oO IT WAS ONLY A DREAM | of the Moment. By Helen Oldfield. HATTERED 1 idols, are new walker req HE figure Tf she be enn tiahety c and a broke! and woman, stand way man astic f This is a nstep and a double and th two very sake of the belo end and walker needs a pair { |end negro dives there would have \ been no-effective prohibition move- ‘ment * ff in New York the brewers {) who are backing the Raines law hotels would require every saloon- | keeper whose license tax they pay ‘and on whose place they have a 1) mortgage to run a decent, reputable house, there would not he the de- mand for more stringent legislation which in the long run will prevail And t straight. graceful walker of} none ew | the new school must have a full, round voked host It {s painful to behold the galt of t h she wou cave in or be agreed and as tastes and habits to those of r her walk | The Roaion watk || Broken Idols After Marriage — The Fun-Makers | Fish for Laughs. | == & because his 9 down ‘ unless flagrant and open abuses are corrected in some other \ "Women’s Work Va. Men's. To the Editor of The Bvening World A correspondent says that women who are employed in offices @ superior to men clerks and can be Tr lied upon, are found at their d all times, &c. I work in an office wher girls are employed ting all day long to one ng each other what ¢ what Tom did. Also, t which ts very annoying clerke wher are busy Are supposed he at 8 A. M,, but, instead, they ing in at $8.15, and They not always found at their desks when wanted. Ax to worl 5 8 brains, abiiity and « there are none botier to be found t the men Many wor work for m Washington, said place nt, it would take young » paid VETER keep chat Alma & Word st of all the World The ve 10 we the « States JOSHI March 17, 1899 What was date of the Windso: Hote! fire? EON Aak Y whieh our Bookseller, f The & «We clerks. cheaper men clerks K A Pens To the EAitor of The Hvenir | A bill is to bo Introduced } emmending the abolition of nt United States pensi + viding for the paym offices and pi j The auth pome ®),0%) Amount as cor convenience and privation tau ine ™® pens! the sountry! At pr t we pensions from nearby offices in a | Ai the,very, most Should we ot Letters from the People. | Mr. Man « ByF.G.Long TS f Miss Lonely Tries the Get Gay Dodge on (te 7 ONE D HAVE | (¢ TouE C/GARETT. | LITTLE WOULONT YOU LIKE 4 A CHUIWMY- BOHE- CPMAN LITTLE LIFE 1 PARTNER? 5 rS THE MATTE, i || (WANT To Go Home’ WAITER THURRY! CALL Al DOCTOR, QUICK I | (Cay he ( DOCTOR- ARE Yov,.) z NS ideal ga yanuary ZU, | NO. 39.-CIVIL WAR (Part VII.): Sea Pights. | HE U. S. warship Kearsarge, commanded by Capt. Winslow, lay off the harbor of Cherbourg, France, Sunday morniag, June 19, 1864, She was stripped for action, and waiting for the coming of the foe she had chased nearly half way across the world. The final scene of a great naval drama at hand The Confederat had built in England a number of privateer vessels by which they had practically ruined the United States sea trade. The foremost of these privateers was the Alabama, whose captain was Raphael daring, brilliant man. ‘The Alabama in the two years of her er was a veritable terror of the seas, No less than sixty-five United States mercha $10,000,000 worth of Government prop erty Never once putting into a Confederate port or se zes, she refitted, when necessary, in England or some other supposedly neutral country and her course of devasiation unch pd. At the U ad Ss Navy's pure suit grew too hot, and the Alabama fled to France, putting in at Cherbourg. The Kearsarge was at her heels. Winslow lay off the coast and demanded that France prove neutral by ordering the Alabama to leave the harbor, Semmes and his crew, knowing the navy sneered at them as pirates who dared not fight in the open, were only too eager to disprove this charge, So, early that morning, the Alabama steamed out to meet her enemy. Ac companying the privateer, as , Were a French man-o’-war and the English pleasure yacht, Deerh: The Alabama carried efght guns to the Kea Deen ft the Kearsarge’s 163 Sattle of Kearsarge } Somewhat faste and Alabama. As the Alabama steamed out of harbor, the ships and nearly continued las sarge’s seven, and 149 men | The latter ship was also Kearsarge withdrew beyond the “neutral . ground,” then bore dawn on the privateer. As the Union vessel approached, the Alabama opened fire at one mile range. The broadside was returned tinued the fight, drawing and t a circle, con- about one-third mile apart. After an hour of c sides were torn out by the Nort get within neutral waters. Bu g down on the flying foe, V at ht of the in another volley plied with a bt of his men we Winslow refu have done ow ceased firing e so when the Alabama sent The Kearsa mmes and thirty- fed safely to England, force as he might easily y uninjured into Mobile Bay ls were lashed to» of shot adside 1 up to stop t nd monitors 1 by h Morgan on (who t to su rals’ eapture of sillade of 8,000 o al feats of the civil war oc curred on t n—young Lieat. W. B. C In the Roanoke R > iron ram, he Albe! [ave single ¢ ss the neighbe eiaiion flotilla ly r The n the mean time the Albe he midst of the confusi fous plan to t Kear | | | | means but also directed rounded uneh the tor- vinst the he launch to suriace were ng and ag pedo and sank almost quickly yore enacted ed on land, The Hughes Punch Recipe. By Jim Dash. from th | HE pun nat brought fighters fame are easy to recall se | 1 unch of Gove t from them ail : and, foes a w bars | Have failed to tell, ¢ p the whole, let's say the queent r they?” . Harper's Bazar A araratcrs i Dario Tke's dead, Is nat you can ask is done shot plumb through the next thing isy’ e to one little bits of 8 or some limes, ain't surprised, then; his op or two of ver of these times, always: weak,'—Ohicago Then, if it seams a tri tn the dose of And when you try a glass of it I'll you'll say, “Gee whiz!" Let Fairbanks have his cocktail and Taft his Tokay wine, Lat Cortelyou drink mountain dew and Knox a brandy fin Let Uncle Joe take whiskey straight and Foraker eat fire | pet all the band with Teddy stand and twang ¢ Uitle lyres | If once the taste of Hughes's oh gets to the Sunny South | dent win the game with name and fame in everybody's mouth; And although I'm not @ prop to me it's very Pp That all the States that Just went dry will soon be wet again! White Bread the Best. By Prof. Harry Snyder. to chemical analysis of the ra it flours milled fr aliam flour contained the perc of total protein (glutenous digestion riments with these flours, the available energy in the patent flour Vor the Graham flour, writes Prof. Ha the rmment report on the subject 1, entire-wheat and stands tof hard Scoteh Fife wheat. pst and the patent flour the lowea® Hut aceording to the results of proportion of digestible protein an@ u (ie entire- wheat quoting of the protein 1% nlire-wheat flour @ particles (bran) digestion, Thue dam or entiree neat, the y Snyder The | considerable portion of the protein and so resists the action of the digi ly may be more pre wheat fi than In the same weight of body obtains less of the protein and from the fine, because, although the Including the percentage of protein, {t decreases the dige a | Fashion King on Short Sleeves. By Worth, the Famous Dressmaker. By ne means do I disapprove of short sleeves with the evening gown when yur from th from the ¢ It does of the bra increases tion, i} same flour t and germ ay KY met by a long glove; nor yet with the afternoon toilette of ceremonys likewise in company with the glove. But indoors during the day {t is now, ; SB nue, that curtailed sleeve, which displays Just that portion of the arm that, is only in suoh rare oases really pretty; for it 1s elther as flat as a board, cove ; Jered with down, or quite an ugly red color," writes Worth, the Parts dress | maker, in Harper's Bazar. “And in no Instance do I like the elbow sleeve ae |the accompaniment of @ cloth dress; it te far too hard in effect. If short sleevea) } mist be worn, they should be made of lace and soft fabrics, not of cloth, Bu@ | this season there i@ @ revulsion in favor ef very, tong sleeves that reach ¢ even to.the knuokies of the anda = ce.-rn.ngtpm me .

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