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nial | Prova Publiehts Company, Nos. 63 to @ Perk How, ‘Rew You 3. ANGUS SHAW, Pres. and Treas, JOSEPH PULITZER Juntor, Seo'y. 63 Park Row, k Kow Tntered at the Post-Office at New York Cabeert pion Rates to The Evening | Yor Continent and orld for the United States All International nod Canad ie Yrar. fo] One Year. Month. 01 One Mont VOLU UBLICATION of the names of many of the firms that are known to have bought stale eggs bakeries has gone far toward completing the ex- posure begun by The World of this bad business. | But the end is not yet. named and other exposures to be made. It was stated yesterday that Commissioner Fosdick has held back | for use in There are other firms to be the names of some of the guilty dealers in “rots and spots” because he is still investigating their relations with certain members of the Health Department. the connivance of somebody in official station, and that connivance is one of the worst | features of the vile traffic. So those firms whos such comfort as they can in the Misery, it is said, “loves company. f The roundup should be complete. The trade was not carried on without names were published yesterday may find consciousness that there are others, Meantime th m is to let guilty man e¢ rape, -—-— +e ON THE RIGHT TRACK. | TTORNE NPERAL WICKERSHAM has an- A nounced that in future in all prosecutions under the Sherman Anti-Trust law he will endeavor to prove the personal guilt of the principal officers of the | offending corporations. The announcement was made as a result of the slecision of the United States Cireuit Court of Appeals at New Or- leans, holding that the heads of the Turpentine ‘Trust must serve sentences of three months in the United States penitentiary as well us pay the fines imposed. The decision of the court is encouraging to the Attorney-General and the announcement of his intent to make further criminal prosecu- tions under the statute is encouraging to the people. Tf the Government be resolute in following up the proposed course of action, it will be but a short time before the trusts will submit to the law. For when guilt is declared to be personal, reform will become personal. We shall have results. Mr. Wickersham is on the right track. ote VARIETY IN MORALITY. ARY GARDEN may not sing and dance as Salome in Chicago, but she may in Milwaukee, and Chicago people will go there to hear and to see her. She may not in Baltimore, but she may in New York, so Baltimore will come to this city. She may not in Atlanta, but she may in Detroit. Perhaps she may in New Orleans; perhaps she may not in St. Louis. It’ a tossup in Boston, but a cinch in San Francisco, So there you are, The Chief of Police of Chicago declares it is a question of art, not of morals; but we cannot allow the claim. The police is strictly # moral institution. It has nothing to do with art. Besides, in Chi- cago there are enough kinds of morality to develop connoisseurs and experts, but not enough art to make a virtuoso or even an amateur out of a policeman. Americans have one idea as to art, and that is the price. The wide variety of views on this issue showe that it must be one of moral- ity, and high morality at that. $2 A COMMON LESSON. Philadelphia woman that starved herself to death UW aT in an effort to paint a great picture has left to the youth of the world a lesson worth learning. She failed only because she directed her ambitions and her energies not to the things within her reach, but to a task that was beyond her strength. There are thousands of young people that mistake a taste for a talent. They fondly believe they can achieve for themselves that which thy admire in others, They betake themselves to painting, to music, to literature, to the stage, to the bar or to politics with all the swift activities and ardent hopes of youth. Some soon learn that nature has not endowed them with the faculties needed in those lines, Others, like the Philadelphia woman, never do, They work on in obscurity. ‘They fail. They starve. They die. The square peg does not fit the round hole. That’s a proverb. No man that misjudges his talent and mistakes his task ever makes a good figure in life; nor can any man or woman ever learn that lesson too early. ole A Grocery Clerk's Complaint. To the Editor of ‘The Evening World Will no one pity the hard-worked grocery clerk? Protected by no Sunday we watked from One Hundred |aod Sixteenth etreet and ‘Third avenue to Tarrytown, 261-2 miles, in 5 hours 66 minutes. This course has the scenic this poor mortal often has to Iabor from | railways at Coney beat all hollow when a in the morning until 9 at night (on|{t comes to up and down hill, nic | | | Gaturday night some must work until/eeveral move long walks on our «& ned | | 12 o'clpck). He has no time to spend | wie for this waiter, with his family—no time for innocent MAR, F. J.C, W.G pleasure, Nothing but work, work, work. | A Subway Seene, The people might perhaps remedy the | To the Fuitor of The Ever World situation by trying to do their purchas-| 7 ther morning, standing, ae| ing before 6.30 or 7 P. M. ‘Mhis would let | usual, in a jam of human cattle packed | grocers close earlier and enable their/ into the aisles of downtown sub- | poor clerks to have a little rest. Moth-|way express train, I teard the air-| ere and sisters, you would not Wish brake hiss. Knowing what that meant | your sons and brothers to toll from) grabbed a » most people didn’t, | TA. M. to9 P.M. H.W. |S when the train stopped with a jerk | Long Walka. few feet further on many of them To the Editor of The Bveaing World 4 merry monoeuvre of tumbiing With reference to walking recoms we st each otier like a pack of cards, ‘beg to submit the following: Rocently| and one very gentleman was we walked from One Hundred and| knocked over into the lap of a sten- Tenth street and Third avenue to | Ographer, Who looked about as pleased Nyack, N. ¥., @ distance of % 3-4 miles | 48 does a cat when you step on tt (ferry included), in 6 hours 18 minutes, |A short distance further the airbrake From Englewood to Sparkill we walked | hissed again; same confused jostling along the tracks of the N. RR. of N. J. | It happened three times. ‘Ten minutes One day we went trom St George to the | late to the office, Say, I apologize for Toftenville (8. 1.) station in 4 hours 31 calling the passengers “human cattle.” minutes, Our pedometers registered The law would not let cattle be herded 1 1-4 miles, the course leading to the #0 closely in cars. highest noint of Gtaten Istand, Last JOEL PYYZER Jr. k @ Good Position?” ete. “Mia gaz Seemann es ine, Saturd ay. The Winter Girl. | By Mauri Oa . ce Ketten. ihe, Our supports the slde-saddle may be touched up with @old paint. (See Mlustration.) Hints to Young Men Boardin HE young man at his firet board- 1p Ing-house ts at a great disadvan- tage compared to more experi- enced and’ older quests. ‘The first thing the young man board- ing should learn és promptness at the table, A keen ear should detect the first clink of the bell as the servant times to have aug-| picks it up on the sideboart to take it gestions from our|to the hallway to ring. And an active Copyright, 1910,;by the Prees Publishing Oo. rE ihe Now York World.) By Roy L. McCardell. 'E great succ of our “Satur- day Man's Page,” the univer. sal welcome accorded tt by young men and old, is extremely gratifying. We shall be pleased at all Saturday Man’s Fashion, Home, Economic and Social Nites for Benedicts and Bachelors, | young. man ehould be at his place at the table from the fourth floor back before the bell is actually rung. Nourlatizg food and plenty of it is necessary for maintaining a proper physical condition. When the atar boarder passes up his plate the young doarder: can substitute it for his own as it 4m being passed back, after being heapedswith good things by the land- lady. . Courtesy @hould be the keynote of the younggman boarder's action at the tabl self (say to ehick- 1@ young boarder must smile readers on such ~ ; themes os “How Can a Young Man Become Self-Sup- porting?” “Should Have Pocket Money?" “Should a Young Man Stop Work When He Marries a Woman Who Has Little heart. Husbands “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” What's the Usevof Being Blue? There Is a Lot of Luck Left. By Clarence L., ‘Cullen throb stories from life: “How Maude Proposed to Me," “Should I believe Her When She Saya ‘You Are the Covrright, 1930, by The Pues Publishing @Os. (She Mew Teck Wesld). Man's Page.” Firet Boy I Ever Loved’ ? etc,, will ab waye be welcomed, Address Saturday Essence of Git-Bizzy 19 good for Mister Ativersity ie sae | spot a Yellow Streal Home Hints for Men. | F% the Bachelor's Cozy Ccraer.- It 1s idle for most married men You'll get over to attempt to have a cosy corner of their own, women being notoriously carel and inconsiderate of these reat. ful refuges for dainty masculinity, Let ® husband attempt to take @ pride in his cozy comer and wives, sisters and daughters immediately take possession of {t much times as they are home from the shap or oMce, and seemingly have no thought of keeping {t meat or tidy. There ie no reason, however, why the neat young bachelor of artistic tastes should not have a cozy corner in his flat that would be at once the despair much Criticiem and and a Shine, run it over again! Our idea of the Sogxy had it to do over again h ‘The folks that say “He was a good the thought of @ touch! would only let our door-bell alone! ‘There's no Referee to disqualify Kid an. If you're Different you're Dipp let ‘em mumble! py 4nd envy of all his young men friends. A stunning novelty wing chair for ® young man's orner may be made by any bachelor of a handy turn out of an old side-saddie and a three- logged stool or carpenter's trestle, Sims ply nail the side-saddle to the stool or trestle, Complete by tinting to mateh the color scheme of the cozy corn Or, better still, allow the rich old tones of the leather side-saddle to har- monize au naturel, To bring out dis- | tinetive artiatic contrasts bows of blue! or pink ribbon (whichever goes best with the young man's complexton—blue for blonds, pink for brunettes) may be |@dded, and the trestle or etool which try to borrow it! Rather ‘Typhold than Tightwaditis! Our tdea of a Noxious Noise is the lanche! If your rival runs you atdeadsheat, don't split the purse— What cozy dreams next Spring's flowers arethaving! It's queer how small a hunk of change One Dollar {s until M AYBE Trouble ts only trying to find outrifiyou can take a joke! Jaundicepot’the Imagination! may ‘be@color blind, but he can always it if HardjKnock only raises @ mp instead of making a dent ‘Phe trouble with some eof us is that we indulge in too too litte: Self-Analysis: ‘There's a heap of Uplift§in such simple things as a Shave Better two enemies thanione lukewarm friend! Stuph is the wail ofitherc 4 do it differently! ap who says that if he ‘The Incompetent can't, but the Inefficient wan't! ‘The man who tries to bluff through a sloppytjob is bunking only himself! follow whenshe had it” turn chalky at It would be easy to believe that “the worldtowes us a living’ {€ our duns Hard Luck when he hits below the belt! 4 if youtre The Same you're a Slob—so The man who imagines that every hand is against him flatters himself! The dark sky that you think presages a Storm may be only a Wind Cloud! chap who brags about Openin’ Wine! Standing your ground doesn't mean that you shouldn't sidestep an Ava- art out and Page; sweetly and say: “You dor.'t care for the white meat, I believe,” as he takes the breaet and | thigh. | An old agateware coffee-pot superim- posed by the spout over the gas-Jet will warm the room. An old tin tray may be kept under the young boarder's bed to place the heated coffee-pot on hur- riedly, in case of a sudden visit by the landlady. Landladies generally object. to these bachelor ingeruositie: reatly in fear of fire. ‘There is no dan- mer of that, however, if the young man boarder will take proper care and pre- caution. It may be as well, however, for the young man boarder to keep the land- | lady from entering the room after he has eo irgenuously warmed it, even if he tas had time to remove the home- made heeter. Landiedies finding hall bedrooms naturally warm, as they eup- pose, have deen known to increase their | charges for It in consequence. Economic Hints for Men. INE, aharp sandpaper will remove the ehiny surfaces: from long. worn clothes. | A ten-cent package of deep black, dye powder will turn a pair of summer | white duck trousers into glossy black suitable for evening w with coat or dinner jacket. | | | esecloth makes dainty window hangings and washstand splashers for the bachelor's bedroom. Save all the cloth from the cheese you use for welsh | rabbits, Young men looking for furnished rooms at this time of year will do well to avoid hallrooma in houses where elec- tric light is used exclusively. Electricity 4s brillant, but cold. The tin pie plate with wire that ts #0 efficacious as a home-made heater over a gas jet hawdly gets lukewarm against the mocking electric light bulb, —— Loneliness. | i} © little there was need to give— S a itt, # sorrow shared, The slightest bit of tenderness ‘To show her that he cared. | Yet, day by day, content he took | | Hor love, her sympathy, With no more comment than he gave ‘The leaves upon a tree, And when, alone, he grieved be Her gentle life was past He never guessed that she had gone Heart-hungry to the last, —Charlotte Becker in Magazine Columbian December 3, 1910. | handle | | million. j cities | |and @ majority of us atudy {t stand- end the others down. Man—All right. (Continues to shout.) Knives and setssors! The Week’ By Martin Green. Copyright, 1910, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), OME of the arguments they are) business or ride in automobiles are Shouting In favor of giving the| welcome to their own views on the Interborough a monopoly of the | subject of subway monopoly. For mine s seem to| I'll take the view of the seventeen- considerable | year-old «trl, white-faced and hotlow- force to them," re-| eyed, who thin spaced her way at marked the head) Fourteenth street out of the subway polisher, car I rode in on my feet this morning “Yes,” agreed|and remarked to a girl companton: the laundryman, | ‘Gee, ain't this terrible! I've stood Up “but if you watch them closely you'll all the way from Bronx Park!’ see they have a ‘ ” } fot of “Engiien” 3 In “Tenement Town.’ on them, too, ‘They 100k Mke! gg A CCORDING to Mr. Ernest they were going in A Coulter, clerk of the Chtl- ® straight line, but they are designed dren's Court, the bulk of our to off in a direction youthful criminala come from the tene- know anything avout. | ments," said the head polisher. “It 1s a recognized economic principle! ‘With all due respect to the mental fn railroading that two competing rall-| operations under the dome of young roads should not do business In a terri- | tory that furnishes only enough freight | and passenger traffic for one. Monopoly in this instance is required by the In- | tereats of the owners of the railroads and the people they serve, | “But the condition described does not | exist in New York. We accumulate enough new inhabitants every year to you don't furnish tramMe for considerable of aj} subway system. Our present hove in the | Mr. Coulter," seid the laundry man, "I ground was bullt and equipped to | would res ully inquire where elre handle 40,000 passengers a day, ard the | t! experts expected a profit on that num-/ ver. It manages after five years to nearly 90,00) sufferers a day, has staggered through with a y could come from? The bulk of the dren of New York live in tenements. “I would also receive information as to what causes a percentage of juvenile delinquents in our suburts and smail where they have no tenements. The real reason why so many tenement chiMiren are in the courts 1s because \they are #o closely under the eyes of the police. I'l take my chances wit! | the averdge tenement kid and turn him |loose against the average farm_or small jtown kit on any proposition the @o- called sociollgists want to hang up." and Ne a eed the “Hello Central” Rout § rrr SHE,” eaid the thead poleher, “that several Senatora in Afbany during the race track bit session were offered $20,000 over the teleginone to vote againg the bills." ing up. “It's funny,” said the laundry man, “Both the ‘L’ and the subway lines! “that no Senators were noticed going are controlied by the Interborough. | But can you ride in the tube on a pink | u' thoket, or on the ‘L' on a green, jubway ticket? Can you transfer to the ‘L’ from the Subway or reverse at Sixty-sixth atreet and Broadway or | Grand Centra] Station or the Battery? Try any one of these, feats and the! burlies employed by the Interborough as express station packers will make! an effort to have you accommodated at! through the roofs of telephone booths the nearest hospital. during those parlous days. Some of “Learned gentlemen who walk be-|them would jump over the Capitol for tween their homes and their places of | half the money.” “The Interborough has a monopoly of the upper and lower portions of tl passenger transit sandwich of Man-| dattan, The Metropolitan monopoty | 66] takes care of the middle. Every New Yorker {s a student of transit m by -_~ ee ee opoly’, Dumbwaiter ) Dialogues By Alma Woodward Copyright, 1910, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York We The Depths of Divorce. |. Mrs, Stewart and kaife Scene: The Winthrop Apartments, C! AN (calling up shaft)—Knives—knives or sciss scissors! M Mrs, M, (in a rush)—Oh, wait a minute, knife grinder. pairs of scissors and a knife to sharpen, but I have to look for ¢ sto sharpen! Knives or I've got two e palr, Til Mra. D. (sharply)—Please don't yell so loudly! Man Mrs. sharpen matter? Mrs. I've got a terrible headache! (in lower key)—Sctssors and knives M. (cheerfully)—I found the other pair. I'll send them down now; and them well, please—no ragged edges. Ol, hello, Mrs. Dean! What's the Aren't you well? D.—Oh, I've just got a headache, that's all. Man (joyously singing)—Knives and scissors to grind! \ Mrs. S. (opening her door violently)—W1ll you please keep quiet? My baby has just gone to sleep! Mrs, D. (irritably)—There ought to be a law against people shouting up the shaft that way! (Man exits grumbling.) Mrs, M.—Why, my dear, you positively look as thoug! ait Fave you? Mrs, 8. (immediately interested)—Crying? about, dear? you've been crying! Why, what have you been crying Dean is strangely silent and looks down.) . M. (sympathetically)—Have you had bad news, deor? . D. (on the verge of tears)—No. . 8.—Maybe we can help you. . D. (unable to keep silént)—I'm going to get a divorce! . M.—Wha Mrs, §.—Why, you've only been married a year! Mrs. D, (weeping) know, but I can’t stand {t any longer. Duo—Stand what? . (drying her eyes)—The neglect. (Proudly) married. I guess I can do {t again! M.—But your husband doesn’t neglect you Mrs. 8.—Fvery one in the house thinks he's terribly devoted. Mrs. D. (indignantly)—Well, I have some pride left, I hope. I don't wear my heart on my sli ‘e! Mrs, M.—But how does your dmsband neglect you? the tine. Mrs. D. (bitterly)—Of course he's home. He could hardly neglect me to ths extent of leaving me alone the FIRST year we're married! But that will come too. Mrs, 8,—Maybe you just imagine he neglects you Mrs. D, (excitedly)—No, it isn't imagination. Why, when we were first mar- ried my husband used to bring home flowers at least three times a week, and candy, and he used to call me up two or three times a day just to #ee how { felt. And now, day before yesterday was the anniversary of the day he pro- posed to me and he never even mentioned It! Mrs. M.—Well, all men are forgetful, you know. Mrs. 8. (prosateally)—Yes, I've been married eight doesn't even remembe wedding anniversary. Mrs. D. (continuing)—And he never calls me up any more, and {fT call him up more than twice a day [ relly think he's annoyed. Mrs, M.—Men hate to be disturbed at business Mrs. D. (nearly in tears again)—Why, even the way he kisses me !s neglect- ful—just a little, snappy kts, and never more than three or four at a time, and {t used to be ten or twelve Mrs. 8. ou've just your husband adores you Mrs, D. (solemnly)—Oh, I see the change. I earned my living be- He seems to be home all years and my husband orked yourself up into a nervous condition, I dare s It's gradual, but T see tt. And do you suppose I'm going to live on here and let things drift from bad to worse? We've only been married a year, What will It be at the end of five years? No, I've made up my nd, I'm going to get a divorce! M M.—-But it's awfully hard to get a divorce tn this State. Mrs. D, lusively)—-Well, I'll go to Reno then, Mrs. S.—Bul you wouldn't be so silly as to-—— (Mrs. Dean's doorbell rings loudly.) ' Mrs, D.—That's my bell, Just wait a minute. T'll be back directly, (She reappears bearing in her arms a ‘huge white box.) Mrs, D. (all smiles)—American Beauties from my husband, And what do you think? ‘To-day is the anniversary of the day T accepted him. Tt was two day: after he proposed that I accepted, you know, And he remembered and wrote the sillfest Little card in the flowers. Wasn't that dear of him? Mrs. M, (slyly)The fare to Reno is awfully expensty Mrs. D, (omiling brightly)—What do I care about the fare to Rene?