The evening world. Newspaper, April 18, 1911, Page 16

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a sr . +--+ ———— 2 RRR OEY OER ay ae acios The. Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, April 18, 1911, Shoo! The Jarr Family By Maurice Ketten. wag Mrs, Farr Intends to Economtse, ¥3 Until All of Her Moncy Is Spent 53 to 63 jor, See'y. by the Press Yubltehing Company, Nor k Row, New Yo 3. ANGUS SHAW, Pree, and Treas, Jose Prise %. nro at the Pont Office at New Ye jecond-Class Matter, E t pita | For | « i] oi [PA GaMatea in fie Tucerna s Copyrali, 1011, by the Press Publishing Co, (Tbe New York World), ) One Year ‘ . doesn't even pay that sometimes | 30) One Month or nth By Roy L. McCardell. {crass ‘x ‘good ‘many of the Dig se NO. 18,187, ‘ou are glad Easter is} will trim a hat free of charge i ina pan eh | A Mr. Jarr. buy the shape and material from ¢ | z ‘Well, that 1s economy “Indeed 1 am,” replied his good lady. , “I| Jars, didn't have any| “Huh! Not the way they practise money to spare to| anifted Mra. Janr. ‘They get a single! of depriving @ milliner of a few blessed thing, not | profit that they go and buy an even an aster | luncheon some place and then ge ¢ hat! It makes me! matinee and, in the end, like tired to read ali | everything cheap, they have spent ‘money than the: h the bonnet alre bonnet they do get the chic French motel they have tr on and ure endeavoring tol copy f | memory. Mrs. Stryver even trtee trim h nd you know ANOTHER EXHIBITION. AST WEEK the Municipal Art Society opened an exhibit of what New York ought to be and ought to do. This week the McAneny com- tee and the Public Service Commission are | going to give an exhibit of what they can do) | toward settling the subway question. The first ex- hibit was picturesque and pleasing. Judgment upon the second must be reserved until it is all in. For months past the public had been told that something definite | would be made known about the subway “nexi week.” We have now & possibility of learning it this week. Should such an exhibition of definite resolve be made, it could hardly be called sudden, yet it would | be unexpected. Men who saw the beginning of the rapid transit discussion in Ms city are old. People who will see the end of it are not yet bern, but it ought not to be unreasonable to hope that this particular | phase of it will be ended soon, despite the frequency with which such | hopes have been disappointed in times past and times recent. ot ‘ FRAUDS UPON HOMESEEKERS. RECENT decision of the United Stutes Circuit Court of Appeals that persons advertising waste and worthless lands as good home sites, through | the mails, are liable to arrest and imprison- | ment, will go far toward putting an end to one of the meanest of swindles practised by sharpers upon the credulity of human hope. Not much sympathy is felt for a man ewindled by the offer of | 8 gold brick for ten dollars, or of an investment that will pay five hundred per cent. Such cheating can be euccessful only when it appeals to avarice or to a blind folly that really needs a costly lesson. But to swindle a man or woman through their natural desire to own a home of their own is to tuke advantage of one of the commonest and most prized hopes of humanity at large. It is also one of the most easy to accomplish, for many homeseekers are not able to go out of town to inspect the sites offered. They trust the descriptive pamphlet mailed to them. When that is fraudulent, the Govern- ment ought to be swift and severe in dealing with the rascals that circulate it. ddn't know, tut his ell al because It nem on | gested. nas or | s Day," suggested be a day of thanks-| you get the very if T coun get a few nice! and pools, r Mrs, Hibbard f pink rosebuds y, though, Mrs, aries ‘s Wax Wort in Dick the pau Ul and | something, and | Ja cussion. “vnere ts to be tn shoes, They to Atty see them be | as I have to ‘s Mrs. Stryver econom!cal | asked Mr. Jarr dollars a pair will be nothing to pay | economical about her hats Just | for laco kings this summer. It's ‘esent, that 1€ you can be jeve | dreadtu! says, lied Mra, “Maybe it's because the economieal downtown with 3 hats hide the women’s faces, and the swine and spends hours and how dremes aro severcly cut that are the | ing bonnets tried on, and anything she | prewent styles, that the money must go sees that becomes her she tries to re- where it will be seen,’ said Mr. Jarr. member, ‘Then she'll go by ns vt that Just what T was ea as she can get Mko »} asked Mrs. Jarr. ‘That's what tomen wanted, and the trim Uke Mrs. Stryver mean by economy. ne poor They save money {n one place and show her for a do how they are wasting it in another!" oe —es A RETAILERS’ TRUST, ISCLOSURES of the exictence in certain sections of the city of a widespread organization among retail grocers for the purpose of fixing prices of staple articles of food are but another illus- tration of the gradual breaking down of the ( competitive system in our commercial as well as in our industrial life. No sooner do we check | such combinations in one quarter than they make their appearance | in another. From the evidence made public in the new investigations it seems that in some instances at least the course pursued by the managers of the organization has been unfair to competing grocers and in violation of law. That is no more than what was to have been ex- | Wanted to Be Sure. Vr an instructor the new arent, “Rice brings good luck to the bride, Elate opened her eyes wide as he held out her mopping pinafore and asked What, mummy—when it's in pudding?" Anererm: By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1911, hy the Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World). Wn @ man offers a girl “love in a cottage,” when you consider that “really knowing” one woman constitutes a life-time _-_s The Purchase, | FO ARLY tm the winter @ man from the beek- to a Syracuse gente’ far Here the shiny Winter cape he casually remarked to the took a fresh grasp on the speed | hat you bare been around with worte nowadays, he usually means that he will sup- | education. ply the love tf she will supply the cottage. Tf you are really fond of a man's society, why rin the risk of losing |? i ‘i ; | an 1 | ese for a long while ho sate pected. It takes a very high-priced lawyer to devise a means of| When a girl begins to manicure a man's nails and|it by marrying him? | A cea siey ! wogt zou aad tm the ee cur (Dem. cama effecting a combination of the kind that can be «worked in safety. to sprinkle cau-de-cologne on his hair, it is time for him EEO Oe Pee Delius wasn ee ajoined the clerk, “Try thle on —_ proved to be a Therein lies the salvation of the consumer. If retail combinations | {0 Pick out the ushers and select his wedding coat. The average man marries for a home, and then spends all the rest of could be made as strong ae steel, the condition of the generality of Ie; SEYI davlninig WaYe ONE means feider clley cham th, men and women would be as much subject to stress and strain as that A man may admire a supertor woman, but when it comes to marrying, Good Luck Alloyed. he wants either somebody on a nice huggable level with himself, or far After a few years, a husband's growling, like the ticking of the clock of en inhabitant of a besieged city where food was scarce and no enough beneath him to enjoy being patted on the head. sort of gives the house “that homelike feeling. sign of free distribution in sight. | It seems rather apotietiont of a man to want to know a lot of toomen, Masculinity covereth a multitude of whims. ras playing “and Dick threw rive a VANITY AND GROUCH. “ ECAUSE it was Easter Day thousands of people | Hedgeville Dumbwaiter Dollie on Sunday arrayed themselves in Springtime finery | Editor e Stories and paraded their glory along the streets, in the By John L. Hobble | D 1 a l C0) g u e Ss By Daisy Miller | 1 or blouse churches, and upon boardwalke by the seashore, | | | | ap fumed to sug despite a chilliness in the air and flurries of snow | sae ae et tee a | By Alma Woodward | Beat a bolero is ; A 1A Ye Je nok Rood in thle wAnat even | 66 AKE of tho newest, and of rain blown in by wintry winds. Such is|4¥ some fathers are not pertect | fs peneererconenne W ore, | 4 one in the tlluwe the ehestichvanity, EORGH PORK mae that an 0 Copyright, 1UL1, by the Pree Publisuing Co, (The New York World), y yeu 1 l-| tration St ey ne Mt S t that ve article of por y i | nm, and th lero. Because the weather was disagreeable, because the winds were| ture ‘that. ‘ reek Gods ys. Husbands. | ee nme et oe Me E at Hurd Pepper Pot | vulated rows =o Pe. sure te 8 lyin’ to himse | ne: Atwell Arma, tye ld life in th oods with rin Soldiers | beads, Lace srusty, because exposure to swift and sudden alternations of sunshine ' ib | “Mba, Burton, Mrs, Sooner ona | UY Saari a. eee ane tay bee ve 1 could be uded and snowstorm carries always a menace of colds and of rheumatism, HE trouble with most peo v | one her door, She te in the | panion : } | tho same way, OF thousands of people stayed indoors all the day long and missed both | gn,ugie p much: eo Or not aulte:| m porate prowxas of taking off het | Duo (onray itt narrow banding; | enous? Vis. fl ef Matpig but» Rs. 8. (with co but who'd or the blouse canbe the fashionable parade and the solemn services of the churehes. Such time ‘manoeuvring we manage to” call tin,| MPSS. (with contempt)—Hut who'd ‘een too Ge is the effect of a grouch. | ee at the lawyers sald t oo husband f ‘ \ rubbed thelr sleepy one for the erga ; | Kirk wasn’t gu 2S. 8, 4 Reagent cacao Ca: d eve! » portions, qne As each of these characteristics is essentially an outcome of | admitted now that. he haan & dn P| A Seis Seat We fase Nin ar tetde the| lawn aE | much money a ght rello~are y 8 tried to do tha utful are 3 \ ii on temperament rather than of reason, neither set has a right to boast : . Well, how did ye 6 him? | row ein} at ault when a i wore omen “a i 5 f ; RAINS and beauty go han Mrs, FR. (removing the hat- | got Know I never fell gulmpe or without @ itself of a superior wisdom. All who shared in the parade without! BRAINS {mt bee Orfase dian, Foie aot Lodi pers fe | Kulinpe, If an undere ill consequences, and all who missed it without regret, have an equal | amd woman nuperd re reall tween the god we } a | sleeve effect ie des i Mustard had his. soldiers all fired and tae satisfaction in their course of action, but vanity had also the jov of aie 9 i aa (Hee and tie puny imitation Twas | MURA Had bi Melee Ml oer eentaa life, while the grouch had nothing but a dull day. Reduction, | i j ee ao dees reat companies were getting ready ina strips of lace can Be , & ig a dull day, 80 Mrs, B. (wise good | : | Mrs. W in)—Who are you! for us to see thes mens— | bury shiaehed: te the Sas ieee = a tetttiod 2 ‘ we i w 1 this nolse about?” asked edges of tho sleevess talking about, girls [it makes us s with what Ble mennnnnnnnnnnnnnnannnnnnnnannannnannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnannanansty | Mrs. B. ° dancer at the Pal- | we've got—and what's the use of crying |th? Boy Doli of the Clown Doll, who haa The blouse ts make L tt F Have you seen him, Bila? lear tha anonn® just walked up. | in one piece, There etters From the People} | AY pean arecaissa lent te vigntcand it we were|) ct aome know," said the Clown Doll age. Why, my dear, I'm mad about | m, i SAGR wa witaly | y seampered up on a high seat arm seams that are prnnnnnnnnrnnnnnnnnn nnn nnn nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn| married Apollos we'd be wildly ‘ 1 | He's the most perfect thing thac : and peeked out fe Bun 1p, Jed into the Biue for Boy; Pink for Girl cone baci, t | goodte, the Loy Doll, * sleeves, ‘The ful was ever m (helping the cause along) To the Kditor of The Kveuing W Jag tt Mra. S. Censely)—Hia legs! Dia you say those terribly handsome are going to war. Hurry, hurt Which color is gene ed f 1 notice his legs? They're pocmat \aueeaeeer ates sept heey) et’s wake up the other Dotts and wave | baby boy, pink ¢ [Mira Wemtin watk! His kingly watk! | "spre. is ceceming very gonatbley--(¢2,tH¢ Soldiers as they’ march away nee to | seome ‘Tam mos | yea, when you comp to think Of ito | omar) eine Wold ware sealed onthe | Both, bef Bow the tones, you unders (a | windo the soldier boys | man like that would be all right In a {The } Wort , : oe on ae Mies ris Doll ana dr sculptor? A ATH: Be aA HORAN TAT ANS his} Qbout, but I don't think he'd Mt very | aa nae Sue vlan Ha ia? i ae ee e | eyes and mouth! Those bu ning, Com | welt in @ forty-dolla | ee un siwne ate ‘ @ Wes G80 8 Te | pelling eyes, and that ardent, plastic Mrs. 8. (philosophica say | Amerlean an * t boy dolls ex ert’ said the if Mn sizes faonOk Blood inan ater the Clown Doll Over Blouse With Bolero Effect—Pattern No. 7009, iii: 0 ane To the } god~a Why | ours, We ‘Oh, pshaw," said Doll, "You i W aders 1 \ " wledy and's ah {would run as so un ws a" Ho 1D MAY MANTON FASHION, , Puen wond applause he 18| way you | ‘Don believe said the Clown ‘ nd Twenty-third street, or send By 4 '‘ : sndy thing to have around i | Doll mall to MA ON PATTERN CO., 182 B. Twenty-third street, t “The : M K, (sighing profound Why 18 | at times. | When the ¢ ) Doll was not looking | § Obtatm jx. y. Send ten cents In coin or s:amps for each pattern or rede} ; en What is the lowest nur sy you oan reduce yours: that 4 © ey is a husband like) Mrs, B, Gumming . |the Boy Doll clapped his hands real loud These IMPORTANT—Write your drese plainly end alwaya 1 ber that can be subtracted trom 60 that | Weight b 9 five meals a day that? band’s a necessity ng nd it frightened the Clown Doll so he specify size wanted. Add two cents for letter postage if im the remainder will be divisible by 642"| “That's right. It would soon leave \irs, . (scornfully)—My dear, ask mo|that, But oh, you ureek god, for an &lmost fell off his seat. Patterns ty urry. W. HUNT. | me 680 broke I'd have to starv something easier, I never saw @ hus- hors d'ceuvre! “There! I told you sv" H - ba : ayy s \ ‘ Sng ie 3 « - —

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