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re Oe RETRO HS TEAL The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, J SSTARLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. wa President, 60 Pack Rowe, Uren 7 a sob RSA Nevers fs Park Row, lecona-C1 itter. a apron and ra ny Montinent and All Countries in the International * % Postal Union, nuary ro Yes, Notin Politics! ( sits) By Maurice Ketten The VOry o rant] Mrs. Jarr Has Decided to Be a Business Woman. RS, JARM was all radian: nd yet M she was the one who was late for the evening meal this day. Jeneratiy tt was Mr Jarr who delayed i ¢ out of har head, ao thege why Mise inner (as Is culled In Harlem's | puto wiggestion came in tho nick WASHTUB CITY, AND A FEW OTHERS. | HE most interesting thing about the laundry workers’ strike is the disclosure that there aro in this city at least 45,000 men and women, mostly women, whose occupation is to wash and iron men’s shirts and collars, women's skirts and shirt- waists and the household linen. These constitute a washtub city equal in population to Wheeling, W. Va., Wichita, Kan., Topeka, Kan., Lincoln, Neb., Little Rock, Ark., Binghamton, N. Y., or any one of dozens of other American cities of substance and repute. Washtub city stands for the emigration of one industry of tho metropolis from the household to the shop and factory. A genera- tion ago nearly all this work was done inside the home by the wife an@ daughter or “hired girl.” That burden hes been lifted from their ehouldere—and placed four-fold on the family wago-earner’s. A competent servant working inside the home can do in a day, on a wage of perhaps $1.50, an amount of washing end ironing for| which the laundry would charge %5 or $6. ' - AM BOO TL, LE COL LEE, Other household industries have emigrated to shop and factory. WRALLALLE Vogt li held dike x ae as There are cooking, bread-making and, canning as well os weabtul cities in the metropolis. That is true of each of these which is true | of the laundry business. They take the burden from the woman's! shoulders and place it two-fold, three-fold or four-fold upon the shoulders of the man. The labor cost of any article, whether it he steel, furniture, collars or bread, is three parte in four or four parts in five of the total cost. | : Thus has been effected what is called “woman’s emancipation from drudgery.” The price? What is called “the high cost of living.” Simon Patten, professor of political economy in the Uni- versity of Ponneylvania, pute it thus: Forty years ago a man could live comfortably on $1,000 a year. Under the magic of the wife's hand this $1,000 became $1,500 or $2,000, The wife created more value in the home than her husband =| i @d out of it. In her hande cloth became clothes, flour bread and Mos. Jart that she tie same “is, Waal as sa? a8 he KNOW, | py Avinpatitzed with the family «si been with the Jarret yoars-on and | ay off) retainer { So Mrs. Jarr pustied tn late to dinner |Sell the with a radiant face, Dinner was walt: | fe ing. Tt umuatty didn't walt for Mr. Jarr.! “yes, figs Amanda Peckstein Fitnt “Ot course,” sald Mrs, dare, a@ She eatd Mes, Jarry, “wasn't It, isn't tt the pulled off her gloves and kissed the chile | GRANDUST Idea” dren and put her hat on the sideboard! “Sure tit ie sad Mr. Jarr, “What and her Hudson Bay muskrat cont on a) ty it? chatr, “you'll make fun, but I think {t's “Why, The Harlem Business Woman't A splendid ideal Baroness Von Holstein Association, we've formed,” lous toady!—wanted to know if Mra. |Jarr, “I told you that at frst, rence Mackay would be interested or! She hadn't, “ut Mr. Jarr knew bette? Mrs. Belmont, becaus the Baroness |than to say ¢ had the tmpudence to any. ale ‘couldn't| ‘I thougly, you didn't care for these afford to be mentioned with anything | women's clubs?" sugested Mr. Jasr. declasses,’ But Mrs. Stryver ts very | “And T do sot,” was the reply, "O* enthusiastic, and ahe'n to be president. | course, you'd like me to stick tn th “Mra. Rangle has a new dress and a|house all the time, f know. But whi new coat she got for Christmas and a] 1 do not ¢ re, still F thine set of opossum furs that look fust like fits & buyness Woman and eiinchifia, hat at a distance you can't always woar and plain bla. tell opossiin from chinchilla if the sking |silrtwalsts during business hours as are matched nicely standup collar ike a man, Milet “Yet, of courrs, you CAN tell by feel- t told us that the late MH. H. Rogen’ ing, because binchi!la te much eofter. |had a thorough business woman as b But there ten't the wear tn chinghilia [chief secretary and iat he paid ner there 1s in opossum, and it's much more [$10.00 a year.” costly. So that means Mrs, Rangle wit} "So you are ali going to be chief gei- Join. I'm to be secretary and Miss Fitnt ‘rotarfes to mitlionadres at $10,090 + will be treasurer. It was all Mes Fiint's | year?” remarked Mr. Jarr. {lea at tea at Mrs. Stryver's this afte: 4 we are not,” sald Mrs. Jaro noon and evarybody {s enthusiastic, only | “But, as Miss Flint says, thero are as I told you the Baroness Von Hol-| thousands of ways women can mde stein tried to throw cold water on It be- | pin money at home, Why, look at tae cause SHE didn't Uaink of it, but the) Perfect Ladies’ Companion—that haw suggestion came in the nick of time be- | stories tn tt every of how fresh fruits the winter's preserves. Now all things are done out | cause now that the holidays are over | young gentlewoman, in reduced clredn- we must take up real and earnest social |stances, sold fancy articles from side the home, and wust be purchased with the $1,000 income, : . He youn pushoart in @ college town and elgarea SoSGESISSN ; worl, you know. In other words, the old income was $1,000 plus, while the pres- FIFA SOUS SDSS BES 2 | When Mrs. Stryver asked what real|a sum of money sufficient to keep an income is $1,000 minus. : 7 Z land beneficial social work we could take tnvaéd husband in Switzerland, and tt sue enue: |up—for aoclety people are not the mere | didn't impair her social standing im th: Household bread waa good bread, home preserved meat good | superficial {dlers you think them—all | least | Baroness Von Holstein could suggest w: ‘Are vou nll going to set! fancy Home-made preserves and canned vegetables were better hat wo roll!” jtielen from pushearts?” asked Mr. Jarr than anything that wears a colored label. Woman’s “emancipation REN ery ACU aclAT Trade rac. damres ual naae wor ey ee vig ith i “ ‘Why, roll of fat" sald) Mrs, Jarr.|lem Business Woman's Assocta' ‘ 4 prom drudgery” has brought with it the emergence of “embalmed Mra, Rangle, whe isn't fat, wasn't In-|thoroughly organized, Miss Flint say? beef,” alum-bleached bread, “rots and spot It has evolved the terested, and Mra, Stryver lias tried {t she will make us several propos'tor paeP ten ” ind saya dt ts atiguing, and, de-| worthy of our most careful considers: evils of “packingtown” and the cellar bakery. It has created the jeides, 1t makes one so hungry that one ¢ion.”* need of national pure food laws, armics of inspectors and autocratic jeate #o hearty one pats hack the flesh | “How ean von be a business womad: , wne has rolled off, and, then, too, Mrs 1 asked Mr. Jarr. health boards. It has made the problem of the underpaid woman Stryver says that, if a married lady inarried is a dusiness,”” wie mill-worker and clerk. rolls, her husband can't be convinced but ‘and SUCH a bus) ; what she's displaying symptoms of go- If the modern woman would put a littic more elbow grease into ant a ot her houseliold dutics, her husband would not have to work so hard, her children would he better fed and clad, her sisters would not be toiling in the mills for an inadequate wage, and her own figure would not show its tendency to embonpoint. 11 might not then be neces- | Cenreient. 1012, by The ev Yor sary for her to work off her superfluous energy, after approved suf- pela elon, fovernment she polsoned bin, pression in her earlier years, when he twenty-eight, in the fullness of her y he : : » 7 og) CAcnar's assassination, B, C. 4, com-|was campaigning in Egypt. When An-|Greck beauty, Antony became at once | fragetic fashion, by “impeding traffic throwing bricks” and wear | Cleopatra —- Ancient Egypt’) icq cioopatrs to return to Egypt in Gillcla she sailed up the; her slave, and followed her to Alexan- ing deputy sheriff badges, Most Brilliant Ruler. Subsequently, during tho civil troubles|Cydnus in a gorgeously decked galley, |dria, where the winter of B.C, 40-41] ees Ruiee & ea tak ren t pee |@t Rome, sie took the part of Antony, arrayed in all that Oriental eplendor| was spent tn wildest revelry and luxury, Bec S SOs Pine staat 0. NE 2 bled By Sophie irene Loeb penta Ganon C hWnd bikoRe e veral 106) the couple claiming to ‘be the gods Making an Impression, = |_O" on" of SOOAMO NPLATE. CIOS tlan princesses Dearing tha eae waihanare Rami sro | Osiris and Isle Ayime {theres WARTA tact He Seale Hep: Pian may SOCIAL SEARCH AND SEIZURE. name, the eldest surviving jlowed Antony in hie marci nad no pose, He did not know th F the problem were properly approached there would be fe When Y ou Are ne iniy woo furnishes flats sand then is (A Wealthy About to go Abroad Who WHl tntire Furnishings at a Sacer ventured) Mr. Jarr, : j . i ; ; = 4 ent + manded at fourteen his share t@ theyon whom she had afready made an im- «depicted by Shakespeare, She was now — Copyright, 10 She woman," but rather ay mother's sex ( ved a good target for the 4 in the daughter of Ptolomy Auietes, | @ Parthians, and when he |gypt'a Greek line of Kings, was} parted from her on the Euphrates he born 6 RG, and in ssrordanie rus, Coelosyriat, By jower | . may harms, he seconded her claims and] Women hay Sixty per cent. of all the world’s diamonds are purchased by | procured to her her abare of the throne,| hablt of diseus : ; ; * oir husband, t intry. Most of them pass thro ho New ie To gain Caesar's notice, this brittant, | 8 the his country « pass thr ugh the New York custom Sent, eee RITIGA tocaatiind TORT AH) (hey Jnalie house, and when they reappear it ie at such fynctions as those in could speak seven languages in the grom which the recent scandals developed. ‘I'he thing to do is to copy ae — a ing y bib ee oh ; r DF Nw roll of carpet carried ty custom house precautions—assuime the possibility of dishonesty, re- nor slave. When the carpet wax un-| Buest at t : : 1 hy n My 7 fe quire guests to file an inventory of their ornaments on entering the TO! "he elnat Caesar was cantly ree : : fst by her eharni premises and check it off as they leave. This would involve the Mor urother, Ptolemy, being killed in| right of search, but a search made in compliance with convention & Mitte on the Clee t heart burnings and charges. of “unelubby” conduct just [with Egyptian custom became the wife e Alma epee eee Ciltcta baa ‘a yoy hes te plush [he thought her“ ny pti :, | caume some guest at a dance or enchre missed her jewels and {of Ptolemy's ehicat ron, her younger Married. Woodeard Sida and Arabia, which browght. | Gestan sea npala tens! t fosinied that the do be locked and other guests searched, ltnrone at the age of enteen, De- . gigs . een aseitiay Navie te 1 ee | the desor ttle old wort! t These unpleasant incidents might be avoided if women did not |Prved Dy her muandlans of ail royal ate Bieihiias aA om Ee shail? penta ae ghee nd enjoying tite with ¢ 1 Lesher neler oRY- wear gems fo costly as to arouse enpidity and make them haggard | not uso her to their enrichment, and : Comparison-itis a PRA ae eae bracteata nap nea ai ways IN. EVIc aiWoi piles! | with the anxieties inseparable from the possession of chattels easily eee pil a tis ta one PUaR? oraie ae [ om: what They give thelr wivestcontest ny a naval ee Peay erty . on horizon i, } lost or stolen, Since it is not likely that they could be induced to of Arabia and Palestine, and fought for avery ume T have come home Istonas,, hae ave casise Ferme icaicer rile ednbad ee Hevea la Antony a Uae WARDWD ene HM) r | wear things which would neither arouse nor reward eupidity, the My Waits BY fore of anu rien nie banter une ere OOD Ian ALS Stas ONG HLS eve ReAiieht oantonselfaliu wide here a ied ly tovitig. $0: mies 18 / next best thing to do is frankly to recognize the problem and create Pompey an a pursuing him to Alex- Pissaeatnone has arisen between Ted |«weeter isan iaihasl. ROSS SEMRES AIL jt and coolaree i Anroatiie fia) if eat : wa peesn he & machinery to control it. A andria, Captivated by Cleopatra's 2 ed ae tioe eg thn ) but I didn't want tole) would live in retirement. But the Lak So one day, when she was busy at her continuous occupation, the man saw ner |! AS SHE REALLY WAS, right in tha act of trying to create that which HY! edge for the ONE th : "08 | IKKNEW she was nl sonactous every minut ‘He not love falth at once, Ifo w herself as in @ looking: | waited. Gradually he saw all around and THROUGH her. truth, he saw her as in her own sking-glass, She trted te chan since thie was her regular pig charma which had succeeded » 3 3 | “Well I know they love them,” Tan-!with JuYus and Antony fa L, jawered. “Why, one of the women told | + ear Cannan and me that she had been married eight ORR i etar et ne crecahan yoars and her husband nover missed (enon Alexandria, whieh Antony de- is her up two or three times a@ fended soaping tot a asily | re aely | so. it came adout 9 ne oman was always keved isin i Man was always k | | \ | | | | | had hy warrlor's | &SaB ration! The day T was a | rather 2st | i contiauatly glans ) whieh she of Tris 2 face was @ atudy. Var he tt from me to knock so early | eteg in the new year, but I would suggest! ode to he spread {that the gentleman fi question Wants |qhrew himeel? up lo make sure, for reasons best known | for the one reason= | had | ton. it nt did nothing but of the wonderful gifts thelr hus ereipon An nm tw sword, and a Was i Sahel upon Jearning that Cleopatra waa still am fo say, te ne purpose, i wiven her youngest brother, then eloven | Bnd then for Christmas +5 himself, that his wife isn't going to (bce went his way. which ow ha would not carry the same affront a8 a search prompted by suspicion, years old, as a husband, by Caesar, |e 4! money thelr husbands drop into the ofMflce unexpectediy!* ren Ce ee eaten in By aay { some perso: ree awayitrsin saree areas At the New Year's eve ball in New Orleans two policemen used ar continued re time at Cleo. [Mad spent on them New Year's, de } "Maybe? T sald, not at all conwneed. | Augustus suc 64 in getting Cleo ind how she! en he reilected: "0, the tol we ‘ol ‘ Aith gehen ite a's court, After his departure she] One wouan displayed # diamond and | sow, look here, you naughty child” sete hat nner Aho Ul hopes to est cons jlost and the spoll we tost- and the exe to be stationed outside with instructions to “frisk” guests and relieve governed unmoleste She went to Him Javatiiere and sald, quite eae |e picked me up euddeniy and depos: | quodue him by her charms, but her art UDIED, |cellent tings We planned belene to the them of knives and pistols, Could not this good old custom be bene. Reve and lived in & palace near the leesty, that ft was Just ONE of th®Jiteq me on hin knee-"we're golng tolavatied not, Reallaing that Mfe was If her! woman who didn't know why" but now ticially modified f pela tes? : ‘Tier, «When her boy-humband de-|titngs her hushand had given - AB, [have this thing out 1 1 can't | snares that ahe might grace the [Mirror could have spoken what tales it DID understand ially modified for general social use? pee : § . of ‘or gold bana (ave you diamonds, My tneome won't, Metory, andy rather, than {Would have untold ror, In the of Abraham [ime ——-— : permit It, And 1 1 seeing women | x) Scanlan er to vete,| Not once during the hours did shej}coin: “You can't fovt all the peopl a | ‘ ® and 1 owas so | ariel as prizonen ¢ . * 4 rr ple om | Still Safe. oud ot tk and eonided: hina at ine dima | Omens. Sewn wii Slamonde ! a Roman ‘Mrlumph,” she jioenes, Ia a aes jrome day TH bo able to give vou a fur ia aplendid foast to ho prepared by her | ny else to forget her, They} Thus, t, df you particularly want one; but lecithtut attendants, frie and Charmian, [@dn't—therewhy the impres an who my love and my respect won't) beg Now, as tive ‘net three-carat dlamonds and | haere then by one fotas® . win gables’ | ‘Ou, Ted, cea | didn't want the oid diamonds, but! dont, 1 know, or spending all that money and thing: but It didn't THE WORLD'S TAX ON IGNORANCE, MERE is no legal tax on ignoran pay. It pays for things that aro free to all, It renders tribe ute not only to knowledge but to the pretense of knowledge are pe rew natural, uns cpakes the eting s 6 Inde people oy band thas the ‘themselves, it cwine (0 pase urasions | MORAL: IN MAKING AN EMDR ally that her BEAT. Intent wae hidden SION, DO NOT MAKI IP TOO DERE n- {in the OCTWARD imp 0 POR IT CUTS THROUGH od reyal robes and an fnep, whicl bat everywhere it has to. flowers, on ler arm, the bite Wh caused her death almos hack i He put hia hanc tatveen’ the leat quaen GF anclant | Sameer SRE bith shecia® wy oe The City Hall leeches who buttonhole candidates for matrimony Whe home I quiet. | pentix 6 Wisse iae Ue Henn oF A ent | and applicanta for licenses, permits and privileges and exact a for a a ated Peeereres wnat Sa ae for performing a service that the city does without charge are only wos the matter, 1 sata % mb Aniaeit | on thing! dd, seriously one set of toll collectors on the highway of ignorance. ‘The police court lawyers who profess a “pull” with the magisirate constitute Nee sae hig Women LBA Gh (idee entetoe a etraittie Chesterficl:ttan Driver. Coe ‘i a " ; : : i a é y efforts eat tt all ine (tn you are tl I ¥ samen... .papeaneiad but : _ ase, another set. The incoming immigrant is bled by a third set. Men jin Medial Ors 10. tas i A Ja og a aia We wi ane Free Land Gobbled. have even collected admissions at the es of Central Park and into my y have something {mportant te say, 1 "i f Governn tland : ‘ " . ne pal imduls | yon't phone; because a y ke charged the guileless for entering the Atlantic Ocean, eee pee on RITE Pae nae I ¢ taken by home. Deplorable business of course, and yet useful in admonishing flainod y their lor all this, don't sou think I love yo role stieen In he dissin, i i 5 i 1 Did they have pen me=don't you" : Bea PAR er bi trl : ople that knowledge is power and ignorance costs. "3 en on F t y siara tht HK people dge is pover and ignorance costa, te he | sin! {"nutperet tite nn oo [OM fiat, at Ue ttre i re Scan gam 4 them were ver ar. vgn [twenty th # to less than one Sa aan ie a, ee REVERGING THINGS. |THE CORONER WILL FIND OUT I remarke OWN Of courte, oe bath We And eotuwand ed acres. Thoth ran j Hewitt—What do you think of this! “1 ge» another one of your patients faa ee eet ied wit . et te they SDNDE mn anda were s!s land offices tn Mt Are er wi rad, : suffragette business?” {te dena.” HWhatiga: You think gt Girig malig 2 omay aver ibeniile puch a plowidinivces, site la eiileus: manpiisae’ ave Me shed nl asin remember wet Jewett—It {t te carried to tts logical) “you; and Tam greatly pertucbed over @ll9wed to propose in leap year? Mikaee Dente Nae Ident he. Ueaeed:l sare nok cab mbes Ot Mien ek tanto ee Sho Foleh aes OF te | rule vay ae hoa Lrtunen Teas, pane 4 conclusion, it will result in woman put: | hie case. I gave him two kinds of modi- t doesn't bother me as long mua latias acmmieiiaies iain cA i eae Oraris section Being ail shat ae lett OC | as ie siperloigetents whee 1 tis be | au eum 02 added nytarele ting her money tm ber husband's name.” cine and don't know which one it was there's otlll no y “ate they more fond of thelr wiv 4 cold the clog | uaret” BPE sy ey Pepe Bren Judge, that killed bim."—From Judge. beund to accept them,” than I om of > U, 0 you suppose?” = ahas will worm Mi’ pe pact gt GST at Tp AS » ‘ , ee ee r