The evening world. Newspaper, January 17, 1911, Page 16

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5, BSR EY The $a " Published Dafly Except Sunday hy the Prees Publishing Company, Non. 53 to 63 Park Kow, Ne 3. ANGUS SHAW, Pres. and Treas. 63 Park’ Row —-~— JO} York. BEPH PUL Biarld. TZER Junior, Row The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday. January 17, 1911. | =| nd at the Post-Oftice at Now York as Second-C nt jase Matter Bubecription aves to The Evening | For giand and the Continent and Werld tor the United states All Countries In th. international o and Canada... Postal Unton. ear . wiee 50] One Yoor ‘ $9.75 jonth. 80 | One Month . | VOLUME 51.........s0005 obo eeeeeee oe «NO. 18,046, | THE KEVOLT OF T cause of the fall. storage ware hous Big « sand new stocks will soon be coming in. HE CONSUMER, EPORTS from all departments of trade and from all parts of the country tell of a fall in prices of all sorts of foodstuffs, from such luxuries as cham- pagne to such necessities as butter and eggs. is there any great difference of opinion as to the ks are on hand in the Nor There is a limit beyond which no saving nor storing up can be economically made. Unless food and clothing are consumed there will be no profit in producing more food and clothing. "he stream of consumption must keep pace with the spring of production; other- wise there is stagnation. Last year the consumer revolted, From the thrifty housewife to.the champagne drinking sport, there was a general diminution of demand. The trusts had gone too fa the people did, in more ways than one CORFORATIO r. —+¢e—___—_ NS AND PUBLICITY. Congress wouldn't act, but YTMISSIONER SMITH’S report upon the results of the publicity law under which the Federal Bu- rean of Corporations acts is high] Under the e abuses, gratifying. sarchlight of the law the exposed cor- porations have hastened of their own will to remed: Railroads quit granting special rates to the stanaara Oil Company, the New Orleans Cotton Exchange im- | proved its methods of doing business and the Tobacco Trust aban-| doned the use of secret subsid the independents Drawing a just conclusion from these results, the sianieciaka| y concerns formerly employed against | argues that the benefits of the system would be increased if it were so | extended as to apply “to all important corporate businesses.” extension should in fact be made by law in common justice. The The Government should not distinguish between one corporation and others. The light of publicity should be turned upon them all by | And He Came Back. ) {STOP & weice nang By Mauri ! Committee (my ‘% — (iwetonting { ) Swen G es THe 7S leRitz oye y silesemcisote i ~ F ; pineal) So Ge € SSS ALAS an SS ee ne penn ae — ga Ae — A Tue GRaFT COMMITTEE (9 WORKING THE GRAFT CommuT Tee § PoweR HAS EXARED? ce Ketten. COMMITTEE WS STIG (INVESTIGATING ° THE GRAFT CommitTTee WON'T STOP. INVESTIGATING FOR A WHILE » YET My LIVER ISON THE B ef “ LIN ty A A A 1S BETTER | THANtS You ) | ‘a The Jarr Family Mr. Farr ls Going to Ferpetrate a Birthday Party; So Flease Be on the Lookout for it, Alt of You w York World), Copyright, 1011, by’ The Press Publishing Co, (The leagues on the back track of Mrs. Jarr’s mental processes. By Roy L. McCardell. | “Why, don’t you see, a fow weeks bo- CE TAD You know that next Wednes- D ay was your birthday?” asked/fore our silver wedding I could take {some of the rich women I know to Mra. Jarr, ‘| where that silver set was and say—tt would be just during a shoppiug trip t “Sure I kne' said Mr. Jarr. 4 birthday isn't gether, and she wouldn't suspect—and @ny novelty after| say: ‘I'm just dying to get that solid y over twen-| silver set, but it's three hundred dole Up to/iars!’ And I could take another friend 4 About that time the| with means the same way past where } birthdays come up the silver chests were-I saw a beautl JY 9 you as mile-|ful set in a chest, all grape and leat } stones do in a long design—and then, a week or so later, t walk to a clild.) when they got our handsomely engraved 7 ¥ ov L MC CARDRIA curds to our silver wedding they would be ren But after you are over twenty - five ded" © Wedding Is a long way birthdays pass as| “But our silve sugh you were running beside the | off, and we don’t know any rich people, kets in a paling fence.” and perhaps won't know any then," said “Well, I've been thinking that we to be giving a Little affatr of nome Jarr, breaking in upon these bitssful ms. dre W en’t had @ party for the) “I do declare! I never saw @ man est tine liko you!” erfed Mrs, Jarr In exaspera- | "Walt for YOUR birthday," sald Mr.j tion, “You won't even let a person Jarr, “and let us have something worthy | think they'll get nice things some day!” | “It's all right, di sald Mr. dart | Mrs. Jarr as she mind upon the matter, “one's fends don't think they are called upon jrobthingiy, “I'll work hard and hustley and maybe when it t# our silver wedding I'll be able to get you all those things to give one anything for a birthday— | mysel naybe a box of candy or some flowers—| “it isn't that," sald Mrs. Jarr, “Ich and if one must have a festival to com-| people do get such nico presents from nenorate passing of the y ) Ajtheir rich friends—for rich people offly hink it's best to ha wedding, @| associate with rict’ people who eoukl inen wedding, a crystal wedding or a or Ww ng. It's dreadful to admit afford to buy them. But rich peopleare | all the more eager to get them as prea | is old enough to have been married | ents even ten years for a tin wedding, but| “Well, tt has all to be paid back on the fact that the gifts are more costiy | other peop’ anniversar! reasoned the longer one {s married Is a compensa- tion, That's why I say we should try to know nice people and get in with only the best and the well-to-do." “I don't want @ birthday party, Those is ‘3 that got to do with Hnen,/ure for men and children,” aad Mr crystal or silver weddings?" | Jarr, “One's best friends alt around an Mr, Jarr. “So, we'll say no more about it and wadt until your birthday and give you a nice party.” asked Mr. Jarr, j whis; you must be because “It's got everything to d) with t,” went to high school What's the good of ad- | with tn Brooklyn in 18%. No, YOU are old enough to have/ shall have a party, party all of your or | own, Mr. Jarr swelled up. WAM right, kid,” he sald, “and you fet me have just a Little ten, fifteen, twenty twenty-five years 4f one 4s poor and} »ws poor people; that one only r people as one's circle of What can they give. you? But| “Certainly, you can have all the say,” ou know well-to-do people and| replied Mrs. Jarr. “It's to be YOUR wedding anniversaries, then you | part: {EAL cut glass—| “i've got @ plan in my mind," said and plenty of it—and/ Mr, Jarr. “We'll have a good, old ometimes when I look | fashioned, solid, substantial party, Just ha get REAL linen and pie SOLID silver. beau decree of law, not by executive selection. at how black that allver plated tea set | for our own good friends!” x a of ours ts getting I wish we were mar- a Mrs, I ried years and had rioh|What other kind would we have? But j THE LAW AND THE LADIES. friends. I saw the most beautiful Co- to the office. lonial design solid silver tea set down-| We'll talk st over to-night!"” 's birthday town the other day"— Keep your eye on Mr. Ju ILLS have been introduced in the Legislatures of i hat good does that do?" asked the | party, gentle reader; is oe Kansas and Massachusetts regulating the dress of COE En eo SE women, In each case the design is to put a stop to what the authors of the bills deem immodesty. i Short bathing skirts, decollete gowns, stage tights and clocked stockings are all put under the ban. 4t is not ukely either measure will be enacted. Neither Kansas nor Massachusetts has yet reached the point of regulating feminine | garihents by legislation, But the fact that such propositions are pre- sented in one or more legislatures every year is an illustration of | the extent. to which some men think women ought to be continually supervised and controlled. The same spirit is shown in the rules of some hotels that forbid he Story of a Jilt —:By Herself :— rublishing Co, (The New York We Copyright, 1911, by The Press SYNOPSIS, centucky gli, is engaged to Prentiss Muckuer, a ret aint eee eeltege (boy. Both Wen diieorer the sto Paris to study shai Chapter III. The Stars and the Silk Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, rTM, PE Now tock Wordhee She ts Lior engugemen: aged man ion, Vie ai MORE good women on the stage to-day; TRULY fitted. It may verily seem aj thing and the SUCCESS tn ano pls . than In MANY of the other walks of| MILKY way compared to the other,| It is really very fine to see the “star"'| women ie smoke cigarettes in rooms or roof gardens where men are By Sophie Irene Loeb. |i. 80 tat the “innocent abroad” ts] but tt leads to contentment. Jof the stage going through her part so| Continued.) { Sivaiited toemoke, Woman has loog since bee peat Tall was #0 ALLURING to the girl!|YeTY Much overestimated. Nine times! For, each must fll HIS niche In the easily and to the “manner born," 0 to Lanne 4 been questing for all (hese sammie ME harem, ‘but thore is ‘still i n emancipated from I hei lahitanend | the unis, on out of ten the “innocent” is very know-|scheme of things. Imagine Buffalo speak. But that she has perhaps gone Dif Ur ibctaigmnut tn sein kad Cet Lhd 2o0 cate ‘ 1 ; here is still a tendency to keep her hobbled in Jabiniee Gud catenin soponanemn of| Ete: Bill winning an aviation cup or Billy | over her lines hundreds of times 1s not co bee lg than in some divinely selfiess passion and public. it all, attracted| The sit! who has the interest of her) Taft with a lasso at the round-up! known to the NOVICE who would og LO surance that it would not fall me or I fail ft, and DREW her ag) WORK at heart and has GENUINE] It 1s an excellent thing to -cultivate | SII Ree ee eT axial. ie ine lace -_— o$e— a magnet, In her] t#ent—with these two attributes is; the BEST that is within, But, as in) Ag all that glitters ts not gold so all I knew then that I was no} ; s Ni rae a ehh tee home, town, ghe|JUST AS SAFE on the stage as any-|the case of the girl I quote, it Is bad | that attract often Dis-| Not ,thet 1 lived by bread plone \iraugin vee eaned me os aniiuial POLITICAL TABLEAUX AND RONDELS. was the CENTRE| Where. Yet she must be certain of| business to waste TOO MUCH TIME | TRACTS. Y nd ail of us episodes even then, despite the fact hag Were waar le seoscskinned, ¢rxnicene . of all her merry | Nat whe seeks ere she lay the blame|on tentative hopes. They’ told her, not | must needs by the BEST. ‘And] as if 1 had been a French Jeune fille, There was the fresh-skinnod. frask-eyed "are indebted to the Equal Franchise Society for Uttle group. How | OM some “bold, bad man.” once but MANY times, that she was hold! Because ANOTITER has failed! “younger son’ whom 2 met au an Mall sen aon and. Ww art I cap. thadnventionof «ph eis Oey they admired her} But the fact remains that many als-|not fit. But sie would not BELIEVE. |is no reason to believe that success ix, handsome ¢ rho nunmani there wasan opera slcger, too well knowaleas ne invention of a plan of inculcating political dog- clever" imitations | tT are UNKNOWING as to their| Self confidence is of paramount tim-| unattal There is @ lot of it left, | tured before he escaped to Burmah; hoe Ata ttle known to matter. How vocal student, who is still too mas by means of tableaux and 6 M of the actresses!| REAL WORTH from the view-point of] portance in all fruitful pursuit, But) FILL THE BILL FOR WHICH YOU, me ta name, and a co young Americ ay-makin, eee beatae rondels, It prom And the, recited |Kentus, ‘The magnitled complimentary | when there 1s NOTHING ELSE to back ARL. FI And there wer n time to time, atze young Americans, holiday mega ad eo easant relief from the old fashion of stump things with “auch ] Pinions of friends rarely hold in the|{t up with, dt 1# almost a HIN-| And: Parls, who drifted Agni Oy peiand Uae tare speeches and campaign songs, fa litale ‘ cold, calm business proposition of the | DRANCE. THE APPLAL THAT You my ys ag anya ie | aeees poth for the sak = a iy * ic as well a8 a political uplift. fiche was “nidden ; Seems satisfying may be very mediocre|tears we waste—and the work of our, YOU! newly formed ambition and for Alison's The initiation of the Hew movement presents am nt indeed. head and hand belong to the woman! Wor: position, nong other tab- | under a bushel!;" that all she had to { 3 Itant, colorful outlet of my music for surplus emotion, discre- | ; 9 “ or| So this young woman realized that! who WOULD not know—and would not] WITHOUT ‘THE TINY ‘And with the exu . ’ jeaux one which represents what women were in tl i 20 was to come to the olty and atter a > é ler than they had ever been before. If 1 could have . he P ag . INDE! SD.” 5 SARS ‘THIN Bi tc d restraint were easier than they hi middle ages, and | 4 tue “practice” #he would “arrive. ie Layneninnh only rustle after a) UNDERSTAND. LING STARS THLE BI sored there in that clty of laughter and light, music-fed and inspired and HARD WORK. Con- trary to the COUNTLE:! The woman who wins Is she who re- ery and turns NOT SHINE SO BRIGH How great and splendid it would seem to be a real STAR! How easy it all looked! And surely in the firmanent of these satellites all shone forth in such 4 SILKY way, She could even) PICTURE sending @ whole row of seats to her “former” friends to come to her “frst night.” » story of the stage ts not new. ERY DAY there is the provenbial another what they are to-day. It will be readily understood how | striking such a contrast could be made by illustrating the with middle-aged women in old-fashioned gowns and the other with up-to-date girls in the latest mode, It is clear also that the method could be readily adapted to show the difference between a people under the blight of tariff taxes and the same people enjoying the Ddenefits of economy and reform. Whatever was lacking to the tableaux ised by beauty on every hand, would the little flend of coquetry within me cd at last in the flame of some noble passion or ambition? Derhaps. haps not! The worst of us does not often dle first, alas! In Search of a “Refuge.” } | Jt was in behalf of Aunt Alison's health that we returned to America. been ailing all winter, growing whiter and th er ‘Thewdoctor ordered change, and Aunt Alison, with the cagerness of the S array of the! can COUNT our cognizes failure with brat heavenly bodies WE the tide in the other “For men | { “eters, may rise on stepping stones of their N r4 And | The Day s Good Stories one stage | She came to the conclusion it was best|/dead selves to better things." to go back to the Ko0d office work she! women, too, bless you! The history of | had at home and for which she was tno years tells of the failure in ONE She without any obvious The Major’s Tip. ||Reflections ofa # % % the wish of benefiting others. She says she came and ae hospital in Louls+ could be supplied by the rondel, “HOPEFU. This girl writes and HEN Major Tanks was the best mown poy a famillar refuge, translated “change” into “hone.” ot alti. tiled areal ig ge ae ASKS to have her experience told in | W tracks of Cin We made the voyage early in April, and by the time we reached New York Aunt Alison was so weak that she decided to stop at a Cathol wand was Bachelor Girl friends to ville, where she had once before been, fil, instead of golng on to Shelbyville, I conquered (of her over-ostimated | sored his co Would fain have stayed in New York, but she insisted that she must reach Ken- opinion of her talenta)—No, no one of- | cording to th ysel€ had no homeward impetus. I was thankful to be spared 4 o one 4 finall; icky soll, I mysel€ had no r Di fered her the “easiest way;" for this By Helen Rowland te iia oink Stare Ito sell out hs grocery | Shelbyville, even at the cost of Aunt Alison's decreasing strength, I would gladly A “Maat det | girl attended to her own business, Parte mats ton anared teantuoky at all “Hashand comp: “ nie’ De 0 ™ owt ng of his HAYS. E80 " y unwil ° 1 de ee amp ass or “binnacte” t# absolutely Right here be it known CONTRARY ced 1011, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), tug ‘2 x i last But when we reached that hospital my unwilling homecoming sudden fda Sutton's recent pathetic] Perfect and one must know its error to the old belief that stage life was ' | to me the best thing I had ever done in my life. For it had led me to a 4 Hascription of a “Husbande: Fe and deviation in order to allow for the demoralizing, tt r 8 just what th T'S @ long head that has no turning, my last ¢ house peace! The building, a large, old-fashioned one of red brick, was set far @M sorry to say, painfully true in some be A ship's course is set by the individual makes tt. There are perha back in its grounds, and whatever loveliness {t lacked was supplied by the smooth y 9 | pa é waite sa now > go d é dd, Cases. 1 have a neighdor whose wife is ames Ml standard | ===> om — = Many a man fancies that he has lost his heart | tive: maysel ICs all over for me.” | green lawn that ran betare it to the atreat, and by the stately old trees that Not his equal mentally or morally, But} oe we by tile until he S chen he has merely temporarily mislaid tt. | wored Ranks; “but in the | shadowed And goftened the red. brick angles into a shape gracious and ki: MUPMIAiiS she ip 148 tosaier time | Ket# the correct course, and then gives Lofty Ideals. when he has iy temp v d nae sorir mind meet ame here at 3 | rruiy, tt was the house of peace, The leaves of the clustering trees moved mory, he dlspleases her she beats him, Bome- |e Words “Right on” to the quarter. | for cinnatt Euquirens | softly than those of other trees; the wind on the grass passed with a lighter rh times the neighoors can see her do it, | MAStEr OF Person steering, who com Nowadays it is hard for a girl to decide whether she pila Saat \here than elsewhere; the very alr of that sweet inclosure seemed to di He provides « good home for her and | P&re® With t tering” binnacle and | would rather be fascinating enough to get a rich hus-| | beneficent fragrance. And when the Sister Superior opened the door wite to u keeps his course by that. | fe'worth considerable money, all e. ‘ned he Ress Inconvenient Wait. welcoming us with her tranqu!l smile, she looked the incarnation of all the geatle by himself. What ¢o readers think of | ARTHUR D. BLM, | band or rich enough to buy @ fascinating one, | last cummer,” | influences that breathed about her. hls reward from his muscular wife? May 34, 18s8x, | rr: T was dread What wonder that I thought I had come Into the promised land where I would JAMES GRAY, ‘0 the Editor of The Evening World Now that there is a movement against tomen wearing weapons lik | play upon a golden harp forevermore, forgetful alike of the ¥ and of ment Weat Poin When was the Brooklyn Bridge the hatpin, why not include the lorgnette, with which many a@ man has been | But even in the promised land, even in the house of peace, man wacks. NQ Yo te Editor of The Evening World »pened to the public? MG, | cruelty stabbed? matter what his individual integrity, whether stuner or saint, man was my Whom could 1 address to inquire th: In Wyoming. laces of examination, the regulations | T the Editor of The Kveniug World: and the subjects of examinations for| 1 answer to the query about Wyom- | personal devil. (To Be Continued.) ee n ‘ know entering a military academy? ing, it would take a book to tel! all $Y 1m tliat the ny S aa one H. SMITH, | bout that State, The climate is fine The average man's judgment is composed of one part reason and three| iu. Lite, Sentence Sermons for Busy Readers, Apply to Superintendent of Wost/!" sumer in nearly all parts of the parts indigestion | er Daint Mistery Academy es to. your| State. In winter it 1s usually very cola : i ‘The strength and sweetness of friendshtp depend on sincerity tempered by a pling Jand there is lost of snow. The north- Worse St ll. cumpatay, 1 Western part Is mountainous, the southe Many a man prides himself on his “moral courage" in doing something) ¥ whe tast elovtion two Ia nen were | \ ern part rolling, with For th 4, discussing politics (and To the Kakior of Tho Evening World: \GouPoari i wb eatie Bint ans ak twhich looks a great deal more like a matter of immoral courage, IA aleeuaetag. Fase (aad It you try to do ali the-good that needs to be done you wil! soon lose heart Answering the query of 8. P. On| as to business oppo “Iron and the Compass,” would say: On board ship they have at least two|chance for some special line, There ts Gompasses—the standard and ring |auite a good deal of hunting pass. The officers of a ship know! Season and some fishing. error of the “standard” compass, ,29¢ Indians there, but not many, and | jot the ‘no account’ kind. There are) « h they allow for, It ts placed OP) aio cowboys there. The Northwestern | gy petite f& couple were married In tunities, 1 think, for doing any good. unless one were on the pot and saw a a deepest de Well,” remarked The only chain that can hold a husband's love is an endless chain of compliments, Jones, at length, fact that Mr. Robin, of, 'e it for my dinner, * ped Suaith, If you set your heart on gold you can get tt, but you can never satisfy your | heart with it, . A ree @ rab! A husband and wife are always entirely congenial when she thinks he Some preachers who delight tn hurling anathemas at heretics wonder why a is perfect and he thinks 80 too, : bribe mre, 0808 Ne teamster should want to swear, jones began to get al trifle igh," he re "fying bridge,” orn top of the | part of the Stato bas some of the finest | Well, the. rabble eal veh nowhere near in this count oth im the) id they have a fatting out after- Sai \ plied, dlepreeatinaly, i ‘The average saint 1s apt to look to the average man like a ce: } OM aus, OF Bi at we | wera” ’ re % Mell 4 stoves ip woree then mone to ony women. taal abet end somapeons en mae gman rebuking @ boy for climbing treee.—Chicage Tribune. sre ar ae APNE SAIN US TPO nO varie ¢ . .

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