The evening world. Newspaper, June 3, 1913, Page 18

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, June 3. 1913 ete. BEBE aatorio. |The Milky Way 3% tasmtzha! 4% By Maurice Ketten| Dianp] @ CTIOTNS of ' } SSTABLICHED BY JOSEPH PULITSER. SRE BAY Sees Cane OF ee Fe ne omeeey., on, 68 te Bere gare am re meee ie neta cae 98.80 Miu LEFT MILK RIGHT Mitw LEFT hq) VOLUME 88....ccceccscccsecccccccevcscccecsss NO, 18,016 A ' \ THEIR BEST POLICY. trout \ VF % weg me race, oan reaee | p WITH FURTHER IMPROVEMENTS ON WE! } OW that Mayor Geynor’s sighature has made the new taxicab ENA Fala one sting after another. j ordinance echeduled Aug. 0 o —_— j N rhe oe, Lite iafvcdlers Marriage—The only anaesthetic guaranteed to cure that throbbing feab companies who so stubbornly contested The Evening World’s hard-won fight to lower rates and abolish private stands have no weapon left save their threat to go to the courts. We do not believe they will be 90 foolish. Narrow and short- * gighted as they have been in their policy of privilege and extortion, om cannot fail to see that the public is now thoroughly enlightened oe awake. Their methods, their reliance upon protection and j privilege, have been disclosed. Meanwhile independent taxi- have proved that lower rates are not ruinous to profite. Never again can people be fooled into thinking that private stands and exor- bitant fares are necessary. } Moreover the new ordinance provides for fair and wholesome " competition. Once the law is in force nothing can prevent hundreds of new taxicabs of comfort and lower rates from bidding for the favor of the pul Will the older companies by vainly trying to obstruct the law enter upon a suicidal course sure to antagonize and exasperate the people who can give them business? Will they nov tither hasten to be the first to bid for confidence and patronage With @ new and broader policy? > Low fares and greater availability will introduce s new era of feeling ‘rouné fre heart, Perfect Wife—That which a married man always féncies he MIGH? have gotten if he had kept on experimenting @ Uttle longer. i i 4 i f 3 Sport (masculine)—A moral cuisinier who degine by burning up Die money and getting “stewed” and ends dy cooking Ais own goose, Aiport (feminine)—The kind of woman that a man enjoys going owt wlth, Dut Rates to coms home to. ar Bachelor—a sentimental broker who te eager to offer share in ite tes to all women, but distinctly opposed to giving any one of them a controlling interest. Good Fetlow—A person who lures a man away from Ais wife, introduces him to John Barleycorn and then “sympathises” with him when the former leaves Aim ané the latter gete him. Thoroughbred—A person who can write “Finis” with @ steudp Raed the end of a love affair, an illusion or a dream, ‘ a Consctence—That which makes @ man tremble when he suspects, dane Srigidity of Ais wife's kise, that ehe has fownd him out. ae LAfe (to 0 woman)—A choice of parsimony, matrimony or alinong” = @ a a WOMAN SUFFRAGE GONE WRONG? ! T I8 THIS? The women voters of Phoenix, Aris, have blocked prohibition and voted to keep the saloons open! More than half the votes cast were those of women, and if these had been only evenly divided Pheenix would have gone dry. '. One ef the star arguments of the suffragiste has always been teat when women vote the schools and the liquor question and the _ Seneral standards of the community are lifted Married LAfe—The vicarious excitement of hearing a man dasedall game and watching Ai, read the newspapers, ates Marriage Tie—The only thing which te not deing worn tight te-amart soctety at present, mw flow to Choose Your Occupattea wiloose tour Ucc The Duties, Chances and Salaries in Various Lines of Wotk ——By Celia K. Husik———- : i < z plane. Phoenix women esem to have hit the wrong track. Their *ehief reason for turning down prohibition is ssid to 9—Librarian. Phoenix being s town to which folks come for rest = O atiy high school boy or girl [ Who ts about to graduate, the work of » librarian presente |are training classes a fleld that is at once useful, | boty to New Tore and Beomctyae ieee agreeable and interesting. | an ¢ ecessary etion! While the pay in this branch of work poral. with forary {s not large. there are many points In it | taught. Upon completion z the community to something‘ approsching female altitudes. “In| |< =a eet ¥ = that maxe It a desirable line of work | the student is road? to anipr Phoenix, om the contrary, the women seem to have taken the vote ‘This sounds like good business, but is it just what we expected women? Giving women the vote was supposed to uplift Xe (se. Feaug an OF womens icc ne Comte ni iz and promptly slid down with it to the sordid levels of mere men. active, exact and methodical, well rend, | The pagrot @ Mtbrartda te troay : Lait Apcsmeih eiiacnomtirey @ Pr 1O00DILLOLOTIIHNTH9000009000500900000000000008060 | 974 Of HOOKS and Industrions, Uprary |610 per month. ‘There are some: LACES AND RAGS. Qn a HlS7 Pity Poor Mr. Jarr, Good People! |i stat iran mem as aensan eee MOVE for, greater caving in running the city is sure of ap- ONLY He’s Penniless in a Great H Busan Ilseatee ear ert ave gett ‘Yet we believe s good many citizens would not be- 19OOOHOODOO : nninentions, A Knewiacee of lames tetowk well tend i ery valuable addition to| young man or woman who ts fond of home team was meeting a formidable] And then he remembered that in the head hat boy, “Check your cane!” |0ne’s usefulness in the work.and often | books’ and is interested not only rival on the ball grounds, changing his attire he had forgotten to] Mr. Jarr passed on, but Oswald, the|S4ds materially to the success of @|reading them, but also in working wi “Look at your collar, It’s all frayed | Change his money—te change it from}hat boy, deployed around Mr. Jarr’s| librarian. A clear, legible handwriting | them all the time. Actual : in the back!” whimpered Mrs. Jarr. the pocket of the other clothes to the} flank and stayed him with » large, im-|'8 also an important qualification. ‘T’'m a-frayed it is" veplied Mr, Jarr, | Docket of the clothes he was wearing. | Pressive hand clothed in a white cotton] In New York City a high school edu- @esaying o little humor of the heavy| “Let this be a warning of the hollow] glove —_ Victorian type, Pptaypadya ec oea erie marmures ae eae? Gir,” eald Oswald, “but you | genmmnmnnnnnnn nnn AAPPAAAOORRRDORPRRARRRRRODDDORDSODD OL ; . jarr self. “If I had only one sul "t go to the Myrtie Room without < a : . : back ef clothes this could have never hap-| checking your hat and cane." T h e M an on t h e R oa rt a pened.” Oswald paid ten thousand a year for . By H, T. Battin, Copyright, 1918, by The Press MuBisning Co. (The New York Evening World), THE HOTEL OLERK. Proof of his statement brought out @ Faultlessly attire, from the Harlem] the check room privilege and none es- Point of view, except for the automatic] CAped him, ripsaw collar, Mr, Jarr stood at the up with my RRIVING at the portals of the is Gilded doorway of the St. Croesus, pen- Hotel St. Croesus, where the Set a Gecen: alless in & great city! stay 8S Pile a foot high trom behind hi: President has laid tango ‘Then he remembered Mrs. Jarr always xplained Mr, Jarr, for] 66 AISING the coin in a strange city | Pile a fo Ind his desk. Borough special stress on the need of improving afternoon, jog Je bool aod ora atte are about.it!" hissed Mra, Jarr. had the bulk of the family finances con-| Very uniform, even a hat boy's livery, ‘ R 1s one of the many perplexing ‘Now, I am through helping th@cbeck bi Great dlanite belied bite, Clara Mud: | 7H can join us at the tango tea.” cealed about her person. And, resolute] has its authori problems that sooner or later | teasers out, he explained, ' the eo-called hotel and theatre district first. ° reaping ‘Then she turned to her friends and re-| in the face of dire necessity, he strode . t brigand, cou'd resd| confront every traveling man,” began ‘0! im that I had @ gold watch . Nevertheless: The asphalt of FiftWf avenue below Fortieth street, | fataern® som (fist, lays, ,clestzte | marked that Mr, Jarr had to attend| in the hotel in the hope of overtaking|¢ruth in’ Mr, Jarr’s countenance, and| the veteran feather salesman.” ‘hore that 1 would leave with tim “the busiest part of New York's finest street, leaves much to be de- | ‘r¢ car she could look down into the to an important matter for a moment | Mrs. Jarr ere she had gainec the Myrtie| for that very reason he saw a dime|are several way of gathering the coin, against me. Tha and he would be with them later, The here the tango tea, under the| Would if his vi but sometimes the usual channels are + sired. Forty-fourth street between Broadway and Sixth avenue {s| ine iadive pe eye ere two ladies swept within and Mn Jase pecetal Uirection of the Notable Plane] UP with the lady ne sought: *US"* | oo: avaliable, A wire to the firm makes “ in the very heart of the “hotel and theatre” section. It would be} "re * deserted at portals of the | tagenet, was in full rhythmic swing, “Can't help it, ” murmured the| plenty of excitement, but generally the | that when I sent the money from New ‘What think you she saw? Hotel St, Croesus. “Check your hat, sir!" cried Oswald, | stim hat bandit, ve the| traveling man is happy to be able to| York the next day, all he would haye to | ‘hard to pick out a block where there is more travel. Yet the asphalt] she saw a frayed collar that had cut hat and cane. It and a way to gather getaway money todlldplad to express it onto ti here is and has been‘for mon haos and ditches In | moment of without focusing attention op the ex- fs { gse ia and has been/ for months o chaos of rate broken |osce She aw algo a The Hedgeville Editor eurrendered and. then, hastened. after| pense account. é ““Let me pack t', the clerie insipted, | $. by jagged cuts filled in with paving stones, » torture and a danger | loose trom the collar button. % L Mra Jarr and Mra Clara Mudridge-| “One time I hit Franklin, Pa. for the taking the Parcel ou of my, tated ] F) ovér tree wide Fohn Hobbie. Smith, He Ly ft it 0 you ink I would §tone ‘te all who drive it. ‘The street is open for traffic. Upon | Mr, Myrtle Pieler eae Aap pas Ee aE BO Ley ining aly lace lie the'som, tnatend oe ane Bat kde | the convenience of what gas or telegraph or telephone companies do PLANK says she has learned , | y ONHY PLANK says that it is get- within. atop. 1 had a nice gold watch and | mand | * working for » living is not ting so there is nothing in @ po- a Mtloal job except the salary. AVID GRAUM never has an opinion en any subject that he under- otands. “Sorry, sir!” said a husky lackey at| thought I could get along for a week Ww! the door, “but you can’t go to the| without it, but much to my sorrow, I | tango tea unless accempanied by a| found that there were no pawnshops in| “TI let him ik the watch, bag sri Indy.” town, I tried a jeweler, but he side-|/I got hoi 1 sent him mye: { “Why?” asked Mr. Jarr, stepped the transaction, I visited the | REGARDS. i be | “Don't know, sir,” was the reply. | cafes, but there they only gave me the| "Did you ever see him after that?’ } “How? asked the autounded Mr. — “But it's the rule, Maybe it's to keep | laugh. asl one of the bunch, bet { Tarr, rho felt his sacrifice in going to :out mashers,"”” Finally, I went back to the hotel and| * asked me for a dime last week/| ® tango te. on an afternoon out of And there was Mr. Jarr without the| tried to get my personal check cashed. | on Broadway," replied the feather man.| || the office might be appreciated, espe- . oor without his hat and without |The clerk told me that he had seen | * jer other folk's checka finally @ally since the day was fair and the r [Aime to redeem the latter, many checks just Ike mine and as oy Romantic Rosalind @ @ {.eutrictive,,| | PRP APPR PEP LLLP LPLA LLL LLL ALLL EP LPL LLP LLLP DL LEP DEEL PLL LL LD NW TST Hg Mount wilt letters saying to the railroad ) Oreenwich, Conn. We do not know

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