The evening world. Newspaper, July 25, 1912, Page 16

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‘ Se SSTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. © Dally Except Bund Press Publishing Compaay, Noa, 69 te iy Maoepe Ouaes WY tow. New Yor a ANG GU EHAN: Frew, Berndt . 20RePH PULETINN, See Becretary, 68 Row. an nna- if 5 PB teSA tnd the continent asi Entered at the Pont. Omics ot New ; emerien Rates steed For : for the United AN) Counties in the International and Canada. Postal) Union. soccess 69.80) One Year. eesssss .80| One Month BB. secsrccccccccccccssccoececeseesseeN “COLOSSAL!” THERA REMAINS THE SUPREME MYSTERY OF THB VICES OF THE AMERICAN TAXI04B. 1 SOUGHT AN BX- PLANATION OF THIS FROM VARIOUS PERSONS, AND WEVER GOT ONE THAT WAS CONVINCING. THB MOS? PRBQUENT EXPLANATION WAS THAT THE GREAT HO- BIA WERE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE VICBS OF THE AMBRIOAN TAXICAD BY REASON OF THEIR ALLEGED OOF R4OB008 CHARGES FO THE COMPANIES FOR THB PRIVI- £B@8 OF WAITING FOR HIRE AT THEIR AUGUST POR- €1008,° 1 LISTENED WITH RESPSCT'BUT WITH INORED- Curr. If THE TAXICABS WERE MERELY VERY DEAR, f OULD UNDERSTAND. IF THEY WERE MERELY VERY BAD, 2OCOULD UNDERSTAND. IF THEY WERE MERELY NOMER- ROALLY INSUFFICIENT FOR THE NOMBER OF PEOPLE WILLING TO PAY FOR T4XI0ABA, | COULD UNDER @F4ND, BUT THAT THEY SHOULD PB AT ONCE VERY DBAR, VERY BAD AND MOST INCONVENIENTLY SCAROB, BAFFLED AND STILL BAFFLES MB. HE GUM OF REAL ANNOYAN orem O08 eeeeeem 18,600 © DAILY INPLIOTED © 4 RIOH AND BUSY BUT ORAWEN-HEARTED CITY LIKB i EW YORE BY. THE BOCENTRIOITY OF IT8 TAXIOAB OR- | G@4nissTiON MUST COLOSSAL, —<Arnold Bennet fn Harpers’ Magasina ‘Almost as colossal as the stupidity and indifference that tolerate Magazine, Thursda Che GEES caieio. |[Why Not? | we ore alan on sED His LOOKING FOR ME cali LL OVER Town LAM Tovocate ME DETECTIVE WHO 1S LOOKING FOR HE 1 CAN'T FIND Hi NE THe Wey Pp - in taxteabs. JUST LIKE A MAN! HE woman eighed that during nine years of married lifr T whenever travelled with her husband he always ordersd fried smelts and tenderloin steak for dinner because on their semeymoon she had once !iked those dishes at eome hotel, will get lots ef eympathy. ’ The everage husband acquires eoon after marriage certain fixed, etet-iron notions as to his wife's tastes in food, dress and anmsements, and theee notions gather inte a narrow systems that-pureues her grim and relentless to the end. In the early days when her husband {s studying her every whim, let a woman admire « green gown and ten to one the man will jump at the fact and stick to it like death Through years of married life, whenever he wants to give her a pres ent he will hunt down that pertioular shade of green dress or green 1. And Ifkewise with her little faflings. Tet her on one single occa- ston leave her pocketbook in a trolley car, and if the misfortne hap- _ pens to impress itself apon her husband’s mind, she might just as “well go on scattering pocketbooks around every day as long as she lives, Forever efter it will always be: “Remember, dear, how terribly jcareless you are with your things, etc.” We know a man who has been married twenty years who exasper- ates his wife to the point of toare by jovially insisting year in and yeer out that she can’t be trusted to travel alone—all because on one solitary oocasion in the first year of their marriage she fell asleep in parlor car and was carried fifty miles beyond the olty where she was to get off! No wonder a married woman Ifkes to take a little trip by herself new and then. If her husband goes along she knows she will be fed, lodged, protected and admonished upon en unvarying, tronclad eched- we that changes not with time or tide. ee PATIENCE! ’ FTER more than a week of tireless circtings around and around the Rosenthal case the police can only conclude that the murderers are all out of town! Otherwise the would eurely have sent some word. But counting upon the pl oa a co-operation of the many well-informed gentlemen of highest in gang circlos and crook clubs who daily motor down to Police Headquarters for a cigar and a chat, the pelice are certain that they will be able to announce shortly either that the shooters have been called away indefinitely, or that they have telegraphed to head- quarters what time their trains arrive and how they would like to be met. eH Five ototime of the explosion were plokes en gsing pokes wp, al wounded f French newspaper, ce unannealed Letters From the People Gelddsh Querics. Be Ge Dilew of The Evening World: room, my meale and the hundred oth GeldAsh are very common pote. Ang 1) "eqisites which ere naturally neces- | A be interested | *F7. Qant. om. 80 this] wor @ wrerminal Ratenston.” ‘To the Ratitor of The Evening World: rf f j ; jt | aul ue nL it i i me an ‘| | f g j connect with the subw: hj eg iit i Te Board of Health, ‘Te the Batter of The Evening World: it t i rf EgTTE LY Hel m i ecececececenecece cesccoococooooors coceeoocoooooeoey Jarr Is to Blame as Usual; - But -He Doesn’t Know Just Why m0. i StS many Oia Cees ace | a Gpceai ly * 998SS9SGT9SSSSTSS 9999999999 9999895 99999999988858899 would pu t him to bed and go through tations. As for the young ledy,; silence, as though langua, Pi fictent to express her ast If my time te took wp, let it be took | fellc! |mhe noticed them not at all. Jarr returned !:. shment an@ put back the loose ellver. When he great bewtlder- Mr, Bilver evidently got her, fer he| murmured that his only desire wee to “Hem,” said Mr, Jarr feebiy, ‘Th longer they run the sooner they left for expenses. This went om for And such was his agitation that h hardly noticed Mr, Jars parting ume |The Conquests Of Constance (SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR 4? THE/HOTEL Rica.) By Alma Woodward ft, 1912, by The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York World), “I yer eyes wus on his face jus before yub feel a6 frisky ee a punk prima had to close ‘em fer good!" donna what has just found & rich angel with no | man?” ear fer music, tn “But how dare he? How dare he? and told his good wife in 4 orted Mre. Jarr. ‘“Tt’s an insult to me! he had lost hip Job ‘Well,’ an Of course, that tp the kind of a per#on ‘think we can stand it for awhil that would appeal to you! Jack Silver ao you mean?” said he. ‘I have #1,700 tn But to think he would) the bank of your own money.’ She the parade around to my house showing | expjained al] to him. They invested th Yes, proud of hie assoctation with Gull-minded young person | After that he had sense enough to giv! shows with! her his earnings after startin; magic lantern pictures thrown om her!” | acain, and became well-to-do. “What gets me," eafd Mr. Jarr, giv-| pyidently the mori ing vont to his honest opinion,” 18 that! ior might be put, “Heaven helps her who ® wise and experienced man-about-| neips herself;” or, “What he doesn't town, a seasoned old backelor, should h , fall for ‘the innocent ohtid’ racket, have no doubt she ts a good gin, but Be that as it may, while my suffrage I should imagine that a young woman whose career has been glong the Kincs of guch amusement enterprises as open air shows and vaudeville, as she ad- mitted, would be et least eophist- Cnr Se tok @ Mrs. Jarr betrayed no Cesire to @peed the parting gueste, Mr. | Jarr accompanied his bachelor friend, Mr. Jack Silver, and the young Indy of the varieties, “La Superba, the jus," dows to the door. “Where shall we go, dear heart?” asked Mr, Sliver, ag the taxicad driver’ ¢ threw away bie cigarette and awaited who poses in variety KNOW,” she hatled me. “YOU have felt that way toward & ‘Don’t epeak to me!” young woman a@ she stepped into the vehicle, Geplaying an astonishing eurplueage of feet for one in whom form wae everythin have te slamt through cheatera, I'd slam you one tn the mush!" Jare wasn't quite sure, but ft to ellef that the young lad ferring that, but for the fact Mr. Silver im I'm afraia my amazement was plainly “Don't say, ‘HAVE felt" she begged “I'm feelin’ it now. It hurts right here, in my breast, just like there wus @ bunch o' sobs beating against my rt, an’ I can't get ‘em up eve: y tMroat, an’ I can’t ory ‘em out— they won't come, Ob, lady, it's fierce to feel that way!” “Why did you give him up, then? “Ig it wasn't you Dut 1a | piteously. “What do @ care for the creature?” asked Mra, Jarr, ‘I wf not even have the opportunity of eutting her when I meet her again, for tt te most unitkely I shall. meet her again! . But I am as- tonished at Jack Silver bringing such a/, person te my house. I ean now under- ewell, stand Mrs, Jenkins’s grievance!” yer heart bustin’ ‘oause| “What ts Mra. Jenkins's grievance?” teh thy Tun asked Mr. Jerr, 1s @ good time to replen! je bumm: “Why, Mra, Jenkins says that every | Prose who do their own dresemaking im yuh don't care bright Sunday automobiles, hired of | wint be interested in corduroy pique that intoxicated man|ig onty 29 cents a yard. This material jusband’s + acquaintance—n0t| maxes up into smart suite and can be hers, she says, C4 1 balers berereil had In the various welts, soul an’ hia | UP to their door In Kast Malaria, soe oneet, (the queerest people swarm her hou Taffeta ribbon that can be quickly Ladies, I repeat the word, ‘ledi abem! of the most vivid complexion si sent Sie see beauinar? all colors and 2-tone effects, The one Mr. Jarr thought this outburst was! otic is ge at the storm, bet it was only! ‘piack and blue are the popular shades thie temp’rature I could be tie band- mover what ever, \q feller has turned yer down! ought to be mad t surpnsed at nothin’ Yub couldn't put one,over on me! I t wouldn't turn @ hatr if Theodore Roose- velt put Nat Goodwin President. Hones’, I wouldn't!" “Ang yet,” I interrupted gingerly, | wus_e big man. gome day some one will surprise ybu. Inside, too—his he He's going to surprise you by mind, ‘making you fall in love with him. The only Really tn love, eo there won't be any he said I wus beautiful, an’ sweet, an’ | good, ‘Cause I ain't anything like that, ‘There was no ready retort, The quick, y'know.” cynical answer I expected wasn't forth- coming. Instead the eyes of the Phone marked inanely, Maid narrowed and loaked much as if hiding bendnd a vell of tears; | ‘It's been flerce to ME, Don’t think it and her under Ip was caught sharply | wus his fault—t wusn't, I was the| by two tiny white teeth, She loeked | crook. straight In my eyes. pose that’s happened, proud an’ ralse the 1 guess that borrowed, amount I would have to pay for a igh : going round to the booking offices. you float me around inatalment- | T'm an artist, J am! And An’ he wus ol he ever told me wus wh ‘The Hudson ‘Tunnel brings us from A Summer Record. several parte of the Jersey Ci; to Just one block from Sheets 4 whet © Grand thing tt would be tf that tude Could be extended just one dlock and to a wonderful thing,” I re- “They never comegand agk her to 66] trimming. ‘The lat can be had tn for a ride, Mra Jenkins says!” Mre.| either of the two shades in various ‘They boat of what} widths from the une inch at 26 cents to ¥ ny nave =“ Sap Woes they eve the five Inch ‘at $1.26. rank at the road houses, ey which have ’ sank 6 oan One | The frills which have been trying to, them with more liquor, And now an established vogue. It ts ti of the women attempted to| favorite finish for the sleeve, the fi igarette—but Mra. Jenkins| tating over the hand to the knuck! And Mrs, Jenkins says) ang extending up the side of the sleeve. she knows some of them will epeak to| In fact, plaited frilling is the favorite | the far-reaching effects of a curse her when she's shopping with friends| trimming this summer and 9 used for |S"e™-Srandfather had a Swiss whose opinion she values. An@ yet.| the neck, sleeves and front edge of chon after all that, YOU want us to take al waists, ‘These frills can be purchased | users c)fcumsances, and many house in the euburbdel” te juspected his mas! , “Way, not at all,” murmured Mr. | partiowlarly desirable in plain or dotted convinced that ‘Oe Yee the’ pind stance asked wistfully. street! Tt would atmplity expedite everything If we could get the terminal exjenston. COMMUTER, I didn't play square. Gosh knows I ain't no femaie George whoppera without even shiftin’ my gum. | 4, But lyin’ to him seemed just like lyin’ It burt; an’ I kep’ right’ on, even though J Bnew I wus going to be hit good fer ft! Gosh, leten to me get- junday school stuff!” er go back te him?” @ anewered quickly.” Gon't want meq—be' honey,” I consoled. T got to quit melanchaty mosing ‘round bere, or I'll lose my job.” “Teee that’s the|enid! Hal Iron smile on my} laughed the elusive bachelor!” asked, I shook my head and emtied. Please let me know to whom to com. I answered her, wale of a “butter* patted It gently. “Never mind telling edout # ff ft me. “Why, f hurts worse'n a eut with salt in !t—an’ it'll burt that way al- Kind Prometheus lured them Gown ward, ever filled with earthty loves But what gods sould bear ee lightiy Deneeth. Cuperichs, 1018, ty Tho Prose Publishing On, (the Now York Wertd. MEN Glenn “make love" ony more; he merely Grope @ few OO Mate ond lete you emuse yoursel! guessing the rest, he etn, small Voice of @ man's conscience hain't © chance in the wort te de Rearé above © pretty woman's flattery. You can't gauge @ woman's attractions By the number of times oe RED deen married; it 1a harger to hold onto one husband nowadays than to Ob vorce several, 4 mon te never 20 tnepired with on excited devotion to the truth we | tohen Ate wife happens to ask him how she looks. Love te Uke @ Fourth of July balloon; it te Rept up entirety on hot ofr? ‘end considering how cheap that commodity ts you would think husbands ané wives might be willing to waste a Hitle more of 4 on each other. Ae for as one can gather from the average Ddachelor’s caustic denuncte | tone of the Fair Bee the great trouble with Woman seems to be that when | ane den't frivolous minded she's serious minded—and he can’t decide which he hates worse, Every man's heart ts tke @ patent safe, and once she has worked it out | te a wise woman who never gives the combination away to another woman, A ainner with one redeeming trait appears to get a lot more sympathy | in this world than @ sainé with o single fault, Too many hooks have spoiled the matrimbnial fishing. A wifes vacation 42 apt to lead either to her husband's reswactiation— or to hte damnation. The Gentle Art of “Saving” a Husband By Sophie Iren> Loeb 1918, by The few Publishing Co. (The New York World). ‘ anaes te on as the division of the family posketbook is es and her rights|an EVIORYDAY problem. husband's trousers | , While the ethics of the foregoing ems reade*}ample may only decide the INDIVID- Evéning| UAL case, the object Is to strike the happy average and see the most polgm ant part of the problem. But, of course, lowing ag an {ilu tration of how going through hud: by’s pockets hi save gracefully, but wilfully apends her nd HIS all as well—she, too, ie the proved advanta, CEPTION rather than the rule. ous to both parth There ts a way to settle this question I can vouch for Its/ to the satisfaction of both parties, But truth, A man (by|no one rule may be applied to all as set occupation @ ham-| forth by so-called uplifters and ed- merman at a large|Justers of married ilfe. Since the CIR- fronworks in Gcotland) on drawing his|CUMSTANCES of adjusting money mate pay repaired to a public house and| ters of the family are quite different im A dusiness man told me the other aay | he would stagger home. His good wife|that he brought home the amount he made every week and placed it in the his pockets, take out all the gold and to what they thought they woul@ need during the following week. Each had @ separate bank ase count. At the end of every six months they COMPARED savings And, ae him, they are prospering e@@ ‘happy ever after.” might sult ONH case in @ Wun Gred; so that if couples were to take time to figure out @ plan, the plea a0, Goubt would figure up for them. One thing !s certain, backed up by em to work | perience of many: Neither should be the SAVENG party, but BOTH. Sach should have HIS Or her OWN saving account, What more joy than for a woman to feel that she has a little surplus, aff HBR own? And many times such @ one slater is trying to give the voting tone) has come to the rescue of the man ia to the voice of Eve and the wife's right | the case by th to equal pay for hrr part of the wi Helps For the Dressmaker,. UMMER dresses hate received their; eating as a strong fall vogue the pannl 8 first mark down tn price and as become an established style, of | awoke in the morning he.wae ashamed | to offer her the small amount he had eral years. One day he e home money in building two brick house: of “W. T.'s* let- know saves him.” A good way to makesthese {s to fasten them to thegtirdle instead of to the skirt just es ‘s now done with the cont effects, and then they can be worn or not avooréing to the wearer's inclination, Buttons, which are such a strong ¢rime ming frature at present, will continae tn favor during the fall and winter, Long sleeves arc’wonstantly appearing in inereased numbers and although the three-quarter sleeve is still fashionable ‘and will continue #0 fo full length ts deli rect for all general we: New alceves fit closely be assortmente are stil) large th wardrobe shirred to form frills or puffings by merely pulliog a thread can be had in 8 cents @ yard and the ta, inch width in silk euite and re @ prominent net and other soft materials, to ‘& foothold for the past two seaso! A Curse’s Sequences G "Se stuns folk in are attributing the tragic d of Prince George of Cusberied te who tn 180 was found dead under sue ‘atl widths from 1 to 7 inches and are! Mme. Sallie, the worst ene hme. het and batiste, Pretty frilting in Vaten-| that she journeyed froin Switariumeees, “Yes, you Got And that’s what would | ctennes or shadow lace in both the white| London, confronted the Duke of Cum ‘happen, and among the visiting autolste/ end ecru are alse in «reat Gemand, berland and cursed him and would be Jack Silver and bis ‘innooent| Pretty delicate striped flannel that|'> the fourth And Mrs, Jarr| wit! not ehrink and thet would male |!#ter the Duk euits nd has to Wear en artical one George sew Prince bes ee =] pW

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