The evening world. Newspaper, October 21, 1911, Page 10

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Evening mo orld. PeBtiehes Daliy Excevt Sunday py,tne Brose Publishing Company, Nos. 68 to 63 Part ie NO york. B ANGUS SHAW, Pros, and Treas, JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, Sec'y. 63 Pork Row 63 Park Row, ————_—§. Entered #t the Post-Office at New York as Socond-Ciass Matter. Bebeersption Rate to The. Evening | For England, and the Continent fori ior (he ited States All Countries In. the, Internation and Canoda a Postal Caton, soy VOLUME «NO, 18,323 STAND BY ASSEMBLYMAN TERRY! OTERS who wa and would legislators men and 1 ghould take note of the independent campaign which Edmund R. Derry is making in the First Assembly District of Kings, the Brook- Yya Heights district. Some Democratic Assemblymen will be punished in the elections for their eins. Mr. Terry is a Democratic Assemblyman who was panished in the primaries for his virtues as logislatoy. He was de- nied renomination by his party—to be accurate, by Sheriff Quinn and Michael EF. Butler, Murphy henchmen—because he voted for Mr. Shepard and not Mr. Sheehan for Senator, and heeause he would | not stand for “the perfect charter. who took the same attitude have been struck down in the primaries | and have accepted their fate. He alone flies his flag. On his record and on the professions of the Fusion city cam: | paign Mr. Terry ought to have been indorsed by the Republicans of | his district. But they saw a chance in the Democratic aplit to clect | one of their own and made another nomination, ‘The issne is hetwoen | @ Democrat who has dared to be his own man and to serve his State 50| One Year. 30) One Month: if a clean-cut issue instead of the rival ¢ ¢ aims | appetite reediedum and Tweedledec, and who have their rubber-stamps, | Other Democratic legislators and city and two more or Jess animated rubber-stamps, one with the! Murphy, the other with the Dady imprint, It is no mere accident that Mr. Terry was on the right side in the 1911 Legislature. His entire carger declares his independent | quality and his qualifications as man. He is of oid Brooklyn stock, | grandson of John Prentice, the Park Commissioner who laid out the | Coney Island Boulevard. He was President ‘Taft’s classmate at Yale and is his friend. He is a competent lawyer, a skillful writer. As chairman of the Democratic Campaign Committee in Kings in 1896! he bolted Bryan and the silver heresy, There is a large independent vote in the Brooklyn Heights dis- @rict: Mr. Terry ought to get it all and the suffrages of sclf-respect- | * §ng Democrate and Republicans. $e UNIFORM DRESS FOR WOMEN? | IKE all innovators, Mra. Catherine Carter Warren of Princeton | mingles wheat with chaff in her plea for dress reform. She is! at war with the falee-hair puff, and so are beauty’s canons. She | is at war with the willow plume because it is a sweatshop product; possibly a more compelling reason is that it looks bad. She is at war with the protruding hatpin, and so is the Conservation of Human Life, But when this interesting and uncommonly well-dressed woman agitates for “a uniform plan of dress” and against “the sweeping changes of fi ”” which woman's attire suffers from year to year, abe is preaching economic revolution that is not less 60 because it is te be achieved through status rather than variation. What a return to simplicity would do to productive industry is Mustrated by the hobble skirt. It contains only about half the ma- terial of the old-fashioned skirt, and therefore New England mills | are running half time. It uses braid less freely than the old-fashioned | skirt, and another set of workers has been oppressed thereby. ‘The | classic example of economic havoc wrought by dress reform is fur-| nished by the hoopskirt. When it passed, ruin visited thriving town | and thousands of textile workers were afllicted. It is a fact, as soci-| ologists have set forth, that a general agreement among women to! wear clothes of one simple siyle would bring the towers of industry. toppling about their cars. Speaking broadly, but not coarsely, so! far as the energies of men are not devoted to keeping themselves and | their families alive they are mainly consecrated to clothing their | womenfolk in full and varied splendor. { A uniform, unchanging costume, correspondent to khaki or the} @ober regalia of the white wings? Not if the man behind the mill ner’e bill has his way. ‘Che variety and peoples the streets with new figures and faces, no joy of the ey Is not the indicated reform the decoration of |’ man rather than the simplifleation of woman? 4 ‘ trouble New York City tn 190 99 per) ++ \ of Children, Col-| : Por ar gee Peat roe “And I don't caro if tt ts busy for| *ritue in the Diseases of saearee Saifeent. were Dottie fed, and of the 16,213| 4°72 see that the Netional Committee that _ CARELESS INCENDIARIES me mit the rain,” @ald Gus, “Elmer he| 08 of Physicians and Surgcoht babies under one of age who died {ed Merkle $10 and censured McGraw going t¢ je can tend to business, Me, 1 I! have | deed. Dr. Jacob! saya the dvom all causes in New Stork Oity for rough work," ventured Mr, Jarr. soem HE purpose of fire logis! some enchoyment.” { brought up under that rule w 910 one-third died before they were What ta tt golng to do with the oMtcers ('ff right from the start, largely be- 3 purpose of fire legislation is to protect one mun from an-\""'Repter he ain't coming," aald Muller, if €¥®t be stck | month old, ‘Dr, Jacobl believes that the {Of th@ club reaponstble for not selling cause he claimed to vo a man and had other’s carelessness, and the Hoey act, which empowers the | “Powisit his wite won't let him leaves "The most Important ttem tn the carol tanger proportion of these bables would ; UCkets to people who sent thelr certified bro cnt fut Arainal © women, aie ‘ire issione| sdy inad . {the butcher shop on no account.” of w baby,” says Dr. Jacob, “In moth=| nave tived if thes had been nursed by |Clecks in good faith, but eurned the other five jurors thought Ruszielam Fire Commissioner to remedy inadequate exits and cause fire- hat Bepler he is pecked mit a hen," | er's milk, When anybody ¢ell# you thi rocitere ? *|tekets over to the speculators by the oWsht to cut Into the bankroll of the | trap buildings to be vacated, instances ihe needful rigor of the law, | #4 Gus. “Me, I don't mind what my | cow's milk ts Just ax good, Muga wt ae trough tines or the /Armeuh #0 that loyal fans had to pay | KTAse widow, ibut were not agreed as to] But |i 1 ti i *| Lena saya, even ff she hits me in the} them, A. nursing m should keep] If seg igtit three or four times thelr value for! the exact extent of the cut, jaws and firemen can only fight a blaze after it is started and with something, But mit pino-| herself y and her milk in good condi.| Mother's inability to nurse the baby | them 2 | “The seven jurora with the grouch | facilitate the escape of the imperilled. While i sonte thaie | chile 1 vouldn't care if it was against! tion by eating at regular hours ¢ It Decomes necessary to change the! Ag none of the rest had been mulcted | A@inst the chorus man argued the other | Pp it can mitigate their Rational of the United tata . al way hel baby's food, a “good doctor ehould | iney took Mr. dare tat jurors out of thelr sympathetic state of | tig 4 - mstitutional of the ed States | plain, well cooked meals a day, She) See Pi ‘ook Mr, Jarr's » coldly, bet . damage, no law can greatly lessen the number of fires, That resis I vouldn’t let her int "| should drink water between meals, She he nonanltad mediately to take} «1 near Rafferty, the gits | mind, Starting with the odds 7 to with the individual. He must be his brother's keeper. shuted the cards, | wiould nurse the baby at regular hours,| plane Of ine be ae a feedings | hurted again,” sald Gus, passing up the | against him, Huzzlelamb ran up against Roti a, Sisk ; i at it was too bad that the! semembering that large quantities of| {2 the baby should be prepared exsetly | paseball subject. “'Phoro'a a feller what | hanimous opposition in the jury room| police in a hurry wien they are @eld Tatil people wear asbestos clothing, read asbestos newspapers Ha rare ci Veer so not improve the| SH, ene dnctar directa, Only good snk] onty pave t much catfare ae anye|eventually. And 1 eubmit that he didn't] up,” and have only fireproofed materials and fabries it will be in the Careful Man! quality of @ mother's milk and may bel \, tem should be wiven ihe bate na) ody elme, because ho only has to ride Ket @ run for his money SAIL right," said the laundry men, power of the careless to bring deat? an Wied : injurious to the baby. As long ag thel peat mitie for the merpome tant fan, | to his work tn the morning. The amber-| “It a womad.can get damaxes from a) a good start. Now let Commissioner ‘ d carele ig death and ruin upon others. ‘The in- | mot is well the baby will be wel |irenedt by th i pose fs that {Ur lance trings him iback at night." man for breaking her heart should not) Waldo equip all patrons of Broadway ordinate consumption wnd reckless use of matches, ihe general habit | “The baby should never be kept in al enn: put it the Paty or diet Kitoh | sure, he can't go in a Wacation a man he entitled to damages from i restaurants with police whistles to tow of burning cigar a cigarettes 1 fli 4 ae : room where the windows are closed, or | venient, get good bottt ons are Noto) without getting hurted, said Muller, woman if she breaks his heart? T take when they are held up by the hetbeys Ly ea eties and Minging away the lighted butts, |where the hoat t® @roat, The temporue| conte tracing Tt chee nitk detivered | ‘tte goer to Hermuda to have a good | the stand that any party wearing 1 and waiters.’ the flagrant disregard of his employer's property so often shown hy } ture of @ divin: ym should never ex | 4 vag os : bait pada Be tine and gets 60 sunburned laying of | culine garments who has the sup } i I ! r | ‘ | kept prope it should be boiled | the heach wh damages against | the smoking clerk or work ) ; ‘ | ceod & degrees: the temperature of t) the beach while swimming that he has | gall to bring sult for damag | k rkman—these things, the expression of def | @8 goon as rece milk should | + ‘ h otions | +7 a f efect bed chamber should never exceed © come home from Bermuda @/a woman for laceration of his affections | +4... ahabacteh eather thin of ¢ 4 4 ed cham nd neve | be heated to the proper temperature in | woe bea p avg ey aro} 4 Pageneee dernet than of woaknoss th ilar, make up Amecion’s degrees, ‘The baby Feaulres plenty Of tho nursing bottle sor each feeding. | "4" ghip,* sald Mr. dare. “You can’t put agers’ onant to be handed eome-| fOT'eeN Room annual and mued-reproachful record of fire e cool, fresh alr. Taste meal of t ; | p, said n't his lawyers ¢ sails a I mmual and mich-reproachful record of fire calamity, la 's ‘ aoan | reat Why ¢ nik immedi | cy to or come fi an island, ike Ber-| tying, Of course, there is naturaily a 12 . * e } “One bath at least shoult be given | ate » gly baby, and| muda, except In a et da and vivid difference of opinion as lintings the baby every day, and ft should be | if it Is not sweet Ma te fo thal iene wee: Le i wide and differenc i eaten Buh alee Ser teaut tee 1a bens | “To the ship he goes in a hack when tq what they should be handed, but 1 PP ce: - SDONESD: BIEN OH Rane: EAN 8 eit ‘he i sunburnt and from the ship hel pink that almost anybody will agree By Frank J. Wilstach j fc a da at 4 hen the bottle used by the baby ts) comes home in a hack,” aad Muller, that they ought to be handed SOME. | 4%) | essive, When the baby has a feverlempty it should be thoroughly washed | Just ii ‘ | te (: ith co! ate n cleansed with) informed the grocei AN has his price an¢ actres: or three hours and place co wet | borax and hot water, eausy | informed the: m Pay that the stare wee eur § the . 1 mr & teaspoonful of| full of customers and his wife threat- her fgure the fruits of her labo t | clothes on its head. A baby with fever|porax t aint of 2 . bi “Stanch’’ Welcomers. . "To tha Vditor of ning World n abe He bora » a pint of wate pned to clase {t up f he didn’t burry | The anc! i" In anawer Anxious,’ who com- indivectly, Is ® gainer, providing | cannot cateh ¢ | ‘The baby should be given two or three, over and help. A M*s* “4 "falr dramatic erttie’— ] plains of non-» and whoxe hy hot beyond her strength \ the baby out on hot | teaspoonfuls of cool, botled water sev-! ‘The cards were dealt aid Mr. Slavin- 4 | {en't band objects to \ A Wire: un, Select the shady feral times a day, It should never be} aky had bid three hundred when his son| 66 TD you set me Haase Reine = etnins isiiasill Vatatonea: or the shade of the | weaned In hot weather Jcame in to announce that mommer Da pee se nega po CTORS aro never Incompetent, tiles (and 2 of The Kreaing World sevigh eed and roofs, Keep : But : 1," concluded | wanted him home or she would come) ery t! amked th b They are sometimes miscast. ure to furnish luxuric inform me as to whether SRG iy O45, SE SDOTE GS (BURA OR HOR: Tr. Japa! . make sure) and feteh him, mee " " . | 4 Oe lags caer Pao Astacio eee ber chat the baby should not wear too | wiiling a to nurse her own} said Gus with a #igh, “E think 1 hear! tack in the Democratic party,’ replied plenty of rust skirts te add to her duties by dora | few ote i 2 Aedes - What have you put by for a rainy mony cloiins b hea he will be happy and]! my Lena coming down the stairs.” | the Laundry Man, “and I aiso noted te Ar tet hl for Weiter (ONL Secamionaliy gt past! day 4 | The baby should be Kept qutet, It bis children will grow up tato fine,| “Game called on account of rain!" | horde of stanch and tried Democrats |rITWSE days tie “walking gentle: sate ae Dasecd?") New York “Tbe onan V'd have spent on ball should sivep alone and sleep as muck) heaitiy citizens. It is a healthy moth-|eald Mr, Jax, and departed to}surprise | who welcomed bim beck. There was| > man’. of the tani } nh \ “ KENT, ‘games if it hy et Rosaihie, 2t shguld sleem gn a hang |er’a milk shay peumin” = =§ itn te by SALMA Rome e6r' sang AE TRAM Teseormeely 005.08: Aeweal Seem, ert “a - “H Shall there be | in wt 2% ed vi Copyright, 1901 cam, by The 1 (Phe New York World) vot Then vandsman!" vy not? attled Gus, Anne nae Lug Co, , it's Ike old time again, yet, Ain't 1t? Sure tt 1s? No? 1 guess yes, ‘ing ‘adiantly from his usual taciturnity, as ochle gam Ven it is ra! thing like: p sky, the glazi “Business {#1 in of th ining pinochie,”* Ler nothing,"* season, on a he dragged a chair out from the table | in the rear room of the saloon, ht a . ; the gayety, the very fantasy of | cigar and leaned back to enjoy the first | woman’s attire is to his mind. It makes the world over every season | Bs ’ night there sald Mr. ay sald Mr. Mul ler, the grocer, “my clerk and my wife | jean tend to business. Octob er 21, 1911. ( PT Mr. Jarr Learns That Pinochle Beats Baseball (on Wet Days) spavenenmmenevanens nomen enter | ngenssagsnsyagsnaees should have interfered with they effect was and he vould look like a bulldog World series of baseball games. who sald any time a colored feller said a wor. This aroused but little inte t among “I seen them baseball games when I[[ thought it was nix; because, first, jthe oth their private opinions on the] was te nz bar In Hoboken, They was nine fellers has to be got togedder on {matter being that he who would play|played on Sunday in Weehawken mit) von side, I counted them; and then nine baseball when he might play auction|the Cuban Chiants, what was colored | on another, that's how many?" | pinochle should not be considered as| fell nd the West New York base- ighteen,” said Muller, who was 4 one mentally sound, Testimony to this! batiers, and Chon L. Sullivan was em-! ready reckoner. ' | ighteen then t is," Gus went on; hteen fellers who should be having |@ good time setting up the drinks some- had vere and helping business for some {man who has heavy oxpences, what mit | lis lcense, his free lunch and how he gets swung by customers what don't! pay, ‘Phere tt was, elghteen fellers to jplay @ game what nobody can under- stand, while dt only takes two fellers or three fellers or four fellers You Sthonf Kina! hit, 1911, by The Press ishing Co. (The New York World.) 7 firm hod and not on feather pillows, A to play From Dr, Abraham Jacobi. baby whould never ihe utcted, win |Pinochle vich everybody what hes an, Sey RESIT alt, mother's MINK emg aye nor shoul tt be| elucation AN understand, Baseball: | | ‘6 ! and a bath every 48¥.| sieved to suck @ “oomta ing should be stopped by law! In case of slckness, call “But basevall played in the streets 1s | Dr, Jacobl expressed himself strongly | be 0 joe Nol | ” eo," " yO . a f ould know) Dottle. He referred to the Departinent|*10ud not be stopped by law. Suppose substance of what you sho! BO | Oeere aii butatio witen ot hat of | ¢Yinder or two ts broken now and then? out the care of a baby, according to] ah Duua NY SHOWS SBE OF Winder sian 1 about the care of a baby, Lenk UPhh ablag GHEE Glad ne dlcasdvel| r glass and putting glass in don't Dr, Abraham Jacobi, Professor Em-| eameenunhid | may expect his love to dle of old age. Love is as uncertain as gambling, and nobody should dally with tt who sn” a good loser. Moreover, nobody should enter the love game untl! he or she t | reasonably certain that he or she has selected an opponent who will “play fair.” ‘ One year is more than suffictent, and {f at the end of that time you find to you: REVERIES OF A RIB By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World), Your Money or Your Love! wv" ts a breach of promise sult? * Why should there be a law compelling a man or woman to pay fo having discovered his or her mistake in time to avert the catastrophe o marriage with the wrong person? Why should all the laws be designed apparentiy t force us into fool marriages, and then to keep us there fo: all eternity? Above all, why should an engagement be @ grapplin: hook, with which to hang onto a human being for iife against his or her will? . _ Alas, when we read of a man suing a woman for finan cial heart-baim, a feeling of nausea comes o'er us that t almost akin to pain. In the words of the old, old eong, “We list for a while, with a pitying smile, “Then wink—and turn away!" And yet, it 4s almost as much of an “immodest exposur of the soul” for a woman to arise in court crying, “You money or your "or sobbing, ‘The hours I've 6pew love! ELEN ROWLAND With thee, dear heart—are worth fifty thousand dollars t me: while she waves a tear-drenched handkerchief in one hand and @ bund): of heart-burning letters In the other. By @ strange coincidence the plea in one of the recent cases of this kine has been that the deserted one spent nine years in the love chase without avail Suffering Soulmates! Every engagement ought to be OUTLAWED after sever years at the latest. Anybody who spends nine years in trying to bring @ mat or woman to the altar deserves to be Jeft high and dry on the shoals of sing! blessedness. Any man who can't get the courage or the money to marry @ ¢! at the end of two years never will acquire them. Any woman who allows @ mar to go on monopollzing her for five or six years without leading her to the churet The long engagement, like that other roat that Is paved with broken promises and good intentions, leads to misery. There has been a great deal of disc n lately concerning the “trial en @agement.” We might just as well talk of “good grammar’ or “sweet sugar.’ Livery engagement is, or ought to be, nothing but a trial—an experimemt—1 Uttle rehearsal for matrimony. And, !f the leading man or the leading womar discovers that he or she has been wrongly cast, each shoull fave the privile of resigning from the company and seeking a new eng t before signing life contract to play the comedy or tragedy of matrimony, We really need som kind of a law which will FORCE us to think twice before piarrying once. As for the love that can be healed by a cash-balm, It 1s not worth ten cents much less fifty thousand dollars. Everybody gets his money's worth out of ar engagement—in experience, If not in happiness. It gives you a perspective or the opposite sex that you can acquire in no other way. It offers you a chance to get in practice for matrimony. And every time you thik your heart is broker you are one step nearer to marital happiness. ‘The girl who marries her first love ts like an amateur trying to play @ lead ing role without a rehearsal, It sometimes takes several changes of cast befor: you can find two peopie wh» exactly fil the opposing roles in the matrimonta drama, We rise to common sense on the ashes of our dead loves. And woman should fancy that her life is shattered after a broken engagement. Foi in nine cases out of ten it {8 only chipped. It does not take nine years to discover the main points in @ lover's character sorrow that you have been playing against marked cards or @ stacked deck, the only thing for you to do ts to retire gracefully from the game like @ Uttle “thoroughbred” and thank Heaven that you have learned, your lesson before yor got tled up in the life game of matrimony. The man or woman who can write “Fin! with a ste-dy hand at the ené of @ romance is a THOROUGHBRED, The other kind is—.ne other kind. The Week’s Wash By Martin Green Copyright, 2911, by The Press Hu ing Co. (The New York World). WONDER how that Ruzzlelamb | instance, who would just as lef vote the guy feels after the jury puts the | Democratic ticket as lose his right eye kibosh on ‘its plan to wrap up Aligned up with Mr, Prendergast to wel: the pieces of his come Mr, Hearst back into the Demo- busted eart in cratic party was that eminent follower thousand dollar) of Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jack- Qills,* mused the | son, Georgé McAneny. And bringing polisher, |up the rear was that untiring and per- “Well” asked} the laundry man, “why shouldn't he damages to hte lacerated feel- os ings. The evidence showed that he was on pretty . friendly terms with the mature defendant for several years. If he had turned Reuoee she could have sued | sistent Democ! Otto Bannard, whe him, but he has nothing. Ruzzielamb | Tan for Mayor on the Republican tieket some time back, established pretty clearly that the lady fireworks, mnded!"* Light up th men nal gun has so gave him the bum’s rush when another “Yes, ind was a assem gent app 1 on the scene. blage of Democrats that asststed Mr fan, sons criticise this young Hearst in his Finnegan act. As for the man for bringing sult against a woman any Hall bunch who seem t for breach of promise. Not more than have the Democracy of this com: one man in a million would do it, But | mu roped, ued and branded, Me. when a person with the appearance of | Hearst ts about as popular with them a regular male does sue along the ines #8 4 wet collle, It is going te be pas: stated he ought to get a square deal. ing Interesting to see Mr. Hearst erying “Phe aftermath of the trial shows that to xrab off the De © leadershty seven jurymen were against the p of this State before the time for hold ing th tonal Conver | f When in Doubt, Whistle! {

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