The evening world. Newspaper, September 17, 1912, Page 14

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Se — rr The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, September 17, 1912 he A aatoro. FSTABLISHDD BY JOBHPH PULITZER Padliohed Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 53 to 6% Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZER, President, 48 Park Row. J. ANGUS SIBAW, Treamurer, 3 Park Row, INCOMPETENT, F : a a ERFRAVAGANT FRO" Now on | Tunic fhe © Devore WASTEFUL, Siate Hiatway FuNts ne Ind Bes eey” ' eRe CONSTRUCTION $2.40] one Year. N N OA, Hi 30 One Months scission tan w POLITICS BENERIT Te One Month VOLUME 53 Copyright, 1919, by ‘The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Ward). Fr and the men flirt with you—love and you love alone! THE DIFFERENCE. T°: WESTERN WORLD has done its best to under nd and raise the heroic act of Nogi, the Japanese general who killed praise the heroic act of Nogi, the Japanese general who led Passion say te 0 tempter, Ber res! toe wa , dito its tomb. The us up to our highest ideals. himself as the body of his Emperor pas newspapers of the United States and Europe | respect and even admiration upon the mediaey parity of honor that prompted the self-sacrifice, And yet--when they have said all, there remains a healthy shudder of recoil from a deed that to us may appear indeed romantic but still hardly sane. Even the most thoughtful and sympathetic comments find them- eelves, by every instinct and habit of our modern life, carried in- evitably to the conclusion that the suicide and the sense of honor t required it, thongh noble, were mistaken; that the act will be the last of its kind, and that the gallant eoldiers and siairsmon of mod ern Japan are not less loyal than Nogi, “but their view of life, its privileges and obligations, is saner then his.” The Western World and the Modern Japan ate probably r You can believe all that an honest man business, running for office or making love. Every time a woman asks a man if he loves her “as much as ever” it j ort of makes him doudt it. = ve tried to dwell with { devotion and austere Before marriage a man says, “What is that fascinating perfume!" After marriage he says, “Where did you get that sickening stuf?” From the way in which men are marrying widows and divorcees @ ép- Pears that those who wouldn't think of buying second hand clothes or ser- ond hand furniture prefer a second hand wife to any other lind. ‘ The man who succeeds is the man who knocks once at the door of. Opportunity and then smashes the lock if she docen't open it. > ‘The arguments and the auguries are all on their side. Live men ar better than dead ones. Suicide is doubtful heroism. We have — ‘i ai ab nnd Considering how women subsist on flattery, it's astonishing thet they) changed at and more. Sie | don't use more of the samc mental padulum in stimulating the devotion of But in one respect the act of Nogi seems anddenly to tower out! their husbands, ; a of @ pest age into the present like a mighty monument to an ald _ and outworn ideal. We mean the ideal of Duiy—unreasoned, silent, q A man's idea of apoloyizing is to tell his wife how pretty she leaks . ‘ . when she's mad, stern, instinctive, immemorial, but atill Duty — unquestioned, accepted ‘8 mad. In the days of old Japan and even in the morning of our Western wortd, men thonght hard and constantly about their Duties but did Th ; F d “ not speak much of them. Nowadays over the whol) i!) mon are) e Food of the Shopgirl; daatled by their Righte—end talk of little else. Does She Eat Wrong Things? ey Oe ; LET THE PUBLIC SOLVE 11° enchant 1i. Copyright, 1912, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York World). The taxicab drivers of New York's largest taxi- | QNSIBUR BARADBL of France) ing places in England, where the army ead company, which operates some five hundred iM has taken up the question of tie! of working women congregate for the | y a mid-d 7 is carsin the streets of this city, threaten to atrike food of bad ie tue ata ee _ oe ae. r clency ts and because rush of business is entailing long hours. the result of ao-| !!"e-siving. | The taxicab company declares that it can’t called footion| Then there Ie the girl whe will Nays i fancy neckpiece in preference se lower fares, popularizeand extend the service be- SHINSE (at ig USe | much-nevded lunch, and perhaps ani cab ness in| cause the New York public in sp slow to use taxi- ie fie A D{ dar wif she doesn't took well. To look " 2 well you must feel well, and my dear, : ing. |e collar more or less does not mean | Whoee error | He claims that|half as much as good food and geod ! oir jc jf Let the Aldermen start suie, weli-regulated Upgdided eariabe |" We talseet oral eooncmiee'sh naecaet taxteabe rolling through the streets at reasonable Ment ia more often | the appetite, For to bull@ strong makes rates, with public stands and no hotel graft, and tana’ and taal And. Sobeequnet promonina (Al Tieaeee nt promotion is we'll soon eee! j work than aay-! with it the many little things we @estre. | Cet ae thing else. He | Therefore, fundamentally i] i ‘ ntally, if would be- | points out that the | hoove my sister of the sman Pr. M’CREA, of the Pennsylvania Railroad, sees gow i nate, women who fall ill in the department) take the soup and jet the collar go, ani i haha ‘ ‘ facent Anreenesietime rT h F ‘ times ahead that will “eclipse anything the nation has ever en-| teres Ory fooge. wie bre Wize n spol te) thas eee Use deytul abinit rather teanien y thing take sufficient and proper food. frosty frown, joyed.” “Car shortage or no car shortage,” anye Mr. McCrea, “our Gecesccccosoooosscoooosoocoseoosoeoecosooocoesoooet | Me sys: “They spend lets than 2) While occasionally the fancy bew oF national prosperity is on the hoom. ‘The pulse of the whole country is Poor Mr Jarr H. R Savie Hae eed) Pie meat oF si vara Me sortting Aer nery oy ’ ' ” * | od hth heme of t beating to the tune of happier times. e. as ested So Long tables, and the result hey become | it were better (alban the peed ot f That's right. Put plenty of bands in ihe procession so everybody | That He Is Far Too Ti éd t ota a co une nouonien the army Par bendetry that may always be bought | hubs W. ¥| rather than to pass a alice of iife can keep step. \ ired to OER cr cys sansivorsen @ pone oh hee as rs | o ca tch up with ehe | ‘There are many pale-taced girls in the | joy on Pooverereeseseses sesessevECRC0NN8: pare: ie j \ bd Seeeeeeesessesees | city who wonder why they ure 20 pale| the sirengus of ihe bode “The tia te . ‘4 , | [See we Son dae why. they » pale) the strengih of the body. ‘The finet is ¢ OW that John Hays Hammon has dropped overything to hely think of it," sald Mr, Jarr, ‘Bestdes) “Well, all J know ts that you've used) tnvatid! You know [un not st Rarelii, tha’ ceusce AAR og thiabri met dependent on the laat, ‘ i Taft, the wind ought to apring up pretty fast. Wherever John ‘i baat al enjoy a day off on my own| UP sreuah symptoms on that telephone| with all the work and all be re a ‘Phe same money that will purchase Mir tesy diets bend trite ise . an ye to , : y cy d es and a | Taye is, the storm clouds are sure to be flying. Took for local} tet'e @ to the wildwec™” Kenas when Tt vened bbs pap rtape Ps Pind ae ‘al jcekea and oe lke can be bead to pur-| expense of the body if but @ iheven: | baie 5 8 4 - lo not wist to ” chaae potatoes, soup or other inexpen- ‘4 f L 5 ; ‘ whirlwinds. | Bo, ‘ut much against her eonscience,|bled Mr, Jerr. “So go on and kick inte|Mr. Jarr, ataying her torrent of wonia| #lve, eubstantial varieties of food, beatae’ atte. te rene ee Sc eae Mra. Jarr telephoned down to the ofice|® obange of comtume and let us to the| wih a hand to ter face, “unt cou nna | And here our English sister may gtve| There are many inexpensive teode aah pe t Mr. Jarr had grave symptoms of | Wildwood go! whisper the rest to me while we us a/lesson. Her wages are cons The an Ge choot ae ean: R. MUNSEY will progressivise the Press and thy 1}..!! Moose appendicitis, nervous breakdown, brain| | “You'll have to wait tit some things sctling the Pallrades. ably lower than those of the American| these, and in the words of an Buction ; fever and general collapse. come C. 0. D. that I'm expecting,” sald} “Much ay: y Girls, but her sensible atutud rd} girl,“ Eas to put his hoof on the breakfast table. oN, “ ympathy I get from you!" \ ip sensibie. atutude tows: ‘Stick to the food stays.” ' will try toy Copyright, 1912, be The Press Publishing Ca, Now, I hope you're satinfied,” she| MTS Jarr. “And I want to give Ge:-|sald Mrs. Jarr bitterly. “Now you are | °&ting is certainly evidenced in her rosy | While che frothy ee ‘ pure tesla j- | { «t- Ihe Newtek Woah wild sade Wine Se the sentra: trude orders to dust and sweep—ai-| solng to twit me because I ventured t» | Complexion that ' the envy of all wom-/ turing It were better to aes i a “Without McClellan's elotory the emancipation a 66 TAAL ‘om op at the ofce and teil] ,"!'™ more than satiened,” retorted Mfr. are to 4 thing when my) tell you that I am not feeling well! 1|¢% 1 bave noced in the low-priced eat-!a good vid Irish potato, hig tion would have deen postponed and might never Five been CG ern ri aici nai ate, dare, |Ja"% "TE thore were human beings You) eave directions Mee ARS Week 3] Toomey neve: Wied) ni stroll in he oe = eecseneee issued turning right around and walk- Ng to downtown, tnatead of! when they come back from achool, and! “Well, wt F {ng back in in the other morning. tion of tron hearts who rp! a ‘ell, why don’t we go to it, then?) BATTLE OF ANTIETAM. But ity fata a ies areal || would cis: gave at sor ansmice taseets gall un. Mrs, Rangle on the telephone| asked Mr. Jarr. “Why dally here when ° es It would cost ‘em fifty cents aplece for| “can the cha we might be on our w odish N eckwear Sept. 17, 1862. : | "Can the chatter!” cried Mr. Jarr im-| ‘*Beci : fie , nyt kof working,” grumbled Mr.[ Mowers, they'd be up here in @ body) patiently. “Are we going to have a day | Mrs. eevee ey not going now!" replied bese 1 know what you are going} 1 extend thelr sympathy and financial/off or stay around the house and in-|sly, however. You could have said, ‘| OMBN'S neckwear has grade of the Robesplerre style and . Wo say-—that Tim just a week back from|a't. and bring seven eminent apectalistal dulge in polite conversation?” ‘am going sonewhere and I do not want ually been gaining in impore| combined with re: ae, ae Letters from the People my vacation, Well, : NEfaweven Gene oie they arecions |WOCRT beer ia oan ment ln} YOU to ao along.) You might have Sean tance during the past few sea-| have the tiny revers to finish Pre <4 need a res want rome . j a " i . | | c 4 T tell you, It will take @ lot of rest to] friends and New York businem te “and you' ventured Mra.) frank, But to PRITHND you want me xons, and |t is now a matter! neck of the vest and others have large q sree haxelhae a 08800) * you'll have to wait till I'm|to go along and then to pick @ quarre! of intense interest to every! revers extending outward fi ° 1908—1901. Bnd nometimen physical harm way | Rt me over the fathxue of two weeks) ater—they are wondering at thie moment] ready. You should have let me know| with me because you aco Cam foolish | Woman who desires 1o be well dresned. | the frill, The vest effect aise eae 1 the Batra Toe Brenne Wert: seary| 12,208 the muthoritien take mtepy Tike 20M" om the farm with Gnete Henry.” | who'll wet my desk if I die, and how | You intended to stay home to-day wo T|enough to believe you want me to go!| The newest neckwear shows a strong) sometimes extending to ait ea Me J Kindly let me know how qoany veare|thowe taken in Washington. Make tne ve mot t 1 up this house. T/much Ife insurance I'll leave you, and,| Could have had things arranged for it!|Oh, dear! On, dear!" preference for the popular Robesplerre|then again only halt way tam Robert A. Van Wyck served as Mayorlamaahing of another's hat an act o¢| (ont want you lying a here to-|!f 1 do leave you any what the chances | You must think I've nothing else to do| And Mra, Jarr burst into tears. | styles waist, FESS WAY, SOWA Se Of Greater New York and the dates | disorderly conduct. punishable. day.” yeplied Mrs. dart. “You go oni Will be to get @ fet commission from) Ut attend to your sudden whims! It's} But, just to show you how persistent, Frills are much in evidence in the new] Buttons afford a ple ©. B. |regular fines or imprisonment down to the office and do your work.” f.some swindle promoter they'll alck on all very well for you to take a day off| that man is, he would NOT leave that Models, and the long popular single side} and are anoth rn , onan Walking Futhuatact. wuch violation of the law calls f Nix!” said Mr. Javr, firmly, “1 feel{ you to sell you some fresh printed stock from your work by pretending you are; poor woman alone until he MADE her/|frill {8 now replaced by a double “frill! the new neckwear. ree \ To tae Diiter of The Fventng World: and it will enable several thous strong to Work; the weather Is too at par." Mt But I could be so sick I'd be ready | come along with him. which may be wide or narrow as fancy| tons seem to be the fevonte,. Ley oan fully contrim George W, Bnacken-[ men who like comfort to wear th who work, et de take w day off and | “Tm sue you must have great cont to drop and yat F couldn't He down) However, he showed him — she| dictates the modish black and white effect ere erg and the Brooklyn doctor when he | #trawe all through the month of Bep- | is 0 the woods dence tn the affection your aagoctates of | wing all last night. I never slept a| wouldn't be rushed and hurried just to| The double Jabot {s sometimes sepa-| desired, tiny binck satincom ee tella us to itve outdoors and walk ail] tember t fe time something was v didn't you go to the wood Sum-! many years hav a yi night, the way I ached {1! suit his sudden whims, and while she|rated only by a row of : Inger ne covered But- ‘ ‘ ‘ |many 3 ¢ for you, and'the wel- | every bo ° 2 5 he 3 of beading or Inser-| tons are employed, wre poosbly can in my younger days, [20ne. Tet ue hear what other readers} dey" asked Mrs. Jarr fare, of your, family, if you dle” res eee eceane OF my Body, but I'm sure did go she made up lier mind not to| tion, or it may be attached to a tucked! Tatlored neckwea 186t—the penny omnibuses and five-cent | "*V* to say on this subject. CB K Never you mind Maybe T didn't) turned Mrs, Jarr, tet ee are if it were not for my| speak one word to him the whole time, |or lace-trimmed vest. tinue in {ts prese nt bier ay a trolleys were not avaliable, I could ride} ° _ mealies i) ; eee ee ere oe and become an|not a ward! ‘This vest effect 18 a new modification! the coming season, Peisey during at @ comt of 25 cents esoh way, but as a neaiaeee en ——- a A " .. | black and witte combinatie e@e the ny Income wea one and one helt doliars Yo |Pecially In demand. The thope are eter ni aay parents dee vile tom iuginess { core 1938, by The Frow Pablishiag Co. Ryosee ed ne ares assortnents of black apa t whigh Intter piace 1 had to be at & Se es ee Wane.) eis: Brera rave qaccke combined with Quam. ty the morning and was occupied until the contrasting Aiiaat the same: ery o'clook when I tramped back, That y For dressy purpose ’ was the commencement of my walking| B Vag y ’ A hy r Atl Gite cular cree there Daew {> and from business. I followed it up G Lu ‘4 ‘i thene will be much wet’ 20° falls oat! for years after when my Income iad DOKING FoR 0 a mich worn with the ny Cart i Se Q NTs ple sik dresses, They on considerably {inproved, and many times! E IND 1 CAN'T | ates » They are veep -e¢s wat at 4 in the morning for « walk} ¥CUSE Me! FIND ANY Hene! vat are von le wollte sgtin dress etore breakfast, J. WM. MARSHALL. HAVE ‘you 7 = now. Sh. vogue, Apply to Rest Columbia Unie Losr 2 —_———— ¥: ANY THING £ = a The W, st : all "To the Faitor of The Kiveuing World = ee I 4 i 2 WAI you please } «know 4 « [9/74 7 Fart A Brenneman in Leslie's.) the Pulitzer Journalistic shoo! ta free, | ' 4 1AD bullded a wall, or Wf mot, what th fon feon are?| That was strong ana and tall, And will you also kind how 1 T had fashioned it year » can obtain further tore detailed in ‘TN the ttght grew dim, 7 formation concerning {1% And the shadows gri:: ; aris . JULIA | Vehered an aching fear, About Straw Mats. , , a Te Whe Fditor of The Evening World | T had atened tong, : “Common Sense” has the right idea. | For the rare aweet son, The straw hat season was originally | Of a wou! that was enn meant to cover the full summer nea: Rut “Pattn': tried and true ("Ay 7 { seemed di. uy won, June 21 to Sept, 21, and there ts taraueals ead, | « no good reason why the n of this} And to! ee fad, city should be forced to abandon this Ane To! the wall atitt grew, . comfortable pie of headwear until the summer has cloged. 1 say forced because We are actually forced here to discard the sunburned Hd on Rept. 16 or put up with, insults and abuse Rut T've lifted eyes, To the sun-bathed skies, My faith has breat: Per; ‘ hed a ‘There are hearts of gold set In a world grown cold, And Jo! 20 wall is them +

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