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

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REE a ie —" Ro kveniag. World Daily j ove SBS ono, METABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Baty Except wots af £3 Types but re Company, Now 63 to , Magas Can You Beat It? @ sete. @ By M Maurice ~ee cede a i Ea Rt at the Post-om t New York as Second-Clane Matter. tee to The venting Tor (inaiand ‘and the Continent and OLUME 53... ... ccc cceceeeeeeneeereceeeeesees NO, 18,929 NO SUCH ‘EPIDEMICS’ FOR NEW YORK. AILROAD OPERATION in this State will pass under the eye Of the Public Service Commission with a view to determining how far it comes up to requirements of safety. The Com- m hes held a meeting to arrange an investigation, “the purpose ‘which shall be to lay the basis for such order or orders as may warranted by the existing transportation situation and found ; for the safety of passengers and railroad employees.” “% Officials of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad try - B6 evade responsibility for the ghastly series of accidents on their road By calling it an “opidemic.” meaning apparently an unavoidable visi- ‘tation of Providence. We believe in these days that most “epi- have natural causes, In the case of railroad accidents noto- jy out-of-date cquipment is obviously one such cavse. The facts far brought out by the inquiry into the Stamford disaster show at least one engine of the New Haven road was permitted to @ heavy trainload of passengers after its own engineer had offi- ly reported its brakes to be “no good.” Would it need many engines to ereate an “epidemic” of collisions? This State docs well to take the hint and look into the condi- of its own railroading. The clearly indicated remedy for such nics” as the New York, New Haven and Hartford officials E Bewail is prevention. a —————-+- —____. ‘ ey Just dike a Judge to want a corner room In a round courthouse! i —_——_<42——_____— ce ANOTHER MELANCHOLY ONE. at UR FELLOW TOWNSMAN, Col. Harvey, seems to have * €) packed plenty of gloom in his satchel when he started South to talk to the University of Virginia students. According @ the Colonel, “the business of this mighty commercial country is ®@ comparative sense at a standstill, development of natural re- res has practically ceased, essential confidence among groups or is seriously impaired, and the sir is ladca with apprehension startling and grievous happenings.” 2 Come fet us gaze into the sky om And fancy clouds where no clouds be” to be the Colonel’s frame of mind. Do the facts bear mB out? je The Government report for June showed excellent crop pros lose to the average, with winter wheat estimated at 100,000,000 more than Jast year. James J. Hill said this week: “The average this year is not as large as last, but this ie more than Bp by the increased acreages in other kinds of grains.” ‘Sve - eth promises another 15,000,000 bale cotton crop. The railroads Begum showing their confidence in the future by keeping to their ex- sive plans for improvements despite supposedly ominous rate de- . Business men and railroad presidents from the West declare there “busineca conditions are excellent and the outlook for was never better.” pe We fear Col. Harvey must have taken a squint at the country Mr. Mir. Jarr Get: Gets a Reply to the Query: oil c. > Wall street some days back when the clouds hung dark and the sult for $19,"" ald the gentleman in the |from Argentine? I have @ brother-in- and demand we abolish Schedule K, th One socmans me, bet can Popular Magazine, ‘ burned low. Even Wall street has brightened up since. Be- grass linen sult, “and we will git ‘em |law in Buenos Ayres, and “T agree with you in all you lg line aia Faced A Boy's Grace. G ; mo! Soh eaid the fat a to C4 Aafia y race. the, Colonel sails for Europe next week he ought to note the Sere mente wore nematle Behe rr miare ial tia co Sy Rraeeai’ Chek we eholle test Hon con't bares Meme ond wine: She disten 3 kios te westward and try to carry away a little sunshine in his wrinkled sult, “With the repeal of] “I agree with you, te—for if the sult our friend has ai rag Died eg edly Recor go Schedule K, I look for cheap clothes, |dieman,” interrupted the his box,” and here the fat man ime frovations: (or diner, Ani can ae E —————_+4<e —__ -- —_ and with the tariff off meat we'll git |linen suit, ‘but let this eman show | kicked the box on the end toward him— ———— heart. ‘With @ gold tiara on the Woolworth tower and Miss Civic Pride displa; ——-4 2 —____ pasteboard box contain: against the seat. shoddy! standing up holding onto th WHAT ABOUT THESE BRICKS? bit le be ue einer ed to do is to eliminatethe | “And chis gentleman can’t open that|head by the crook of his .'* sald @ very fat man on the |box and let me burn a hole in his new | umbrella, the hot sun the wooden block pavement of Broadway bétween nth and Soventy-ninth streets exudes a tarry oil of creosote sticks to the shoes of pedestrians and ruins the carpets of the side toward the seat was hidden | allwool euite and your beef and mutton 'present will write to his Congressman |the vitals of this nation!” totally, and Mr. Jarre lege, as had | —-— — ——$—— =| “What can you do with your Con: been sald, almost covered up the print- ing on that aide, until a curious gen- | you hold the whip ind with direct ” A i es anickering young men on the opposite fh grade” aspha't and other kinds of pavement New Yorkers not |side of the car that the lettering on simplest animal in the world ts| complete in itself and independ fe wer behing his legs, projected into th wonder whether some of the city’s wooden bricks ma; Q composed of one single cell. This cell, all] The minute it approaches a micro- | ais! s m= 1-1 id A ; by itself, performs the same functions | scopic speck that It decides ts edible tt] “Abolish the middleman!” cried th resemble a well-known gilded varicty. that the million of cells tn our bodies | throws out from its shapeless self two as though do all togeth; Tt has no cell wall, nothing to protect it from enem! It ts proposed to fly signal flags hourly from the tower of the ‘The animal is called the amoet House of Commons to indicate to an uneasy nation whether Mrs. mee-ba). Examined under @ microscope, Pankhurst is in or out of Sail. i , mF Your Girt! ; Y FROM Mme, INT) SI DIDN'T HAVE HE Doe HO} Ho! HA! HA! CHER, HUH?? Ts ANE CANE ELY USIN YOU FOr 'h CONVENIENCE ‘two housewives were bidding for ber ser- After keeping the janitor unter ‘WhenIsa Bargain Nota Bargain?’ |=" 3% 2 three ant arog tal "be ‘eloped és SOSITORSSDSTEOETELEDEDEDEDERESTESENTEOOESHURSTORRR Fon! Mle to mule sour own bel.” to the derertment: Tepealed. two dollars in this cou! body present that we should test this | i you take the situation with me.” A FARMER'S boy had jum been confirmed ta “Yessl went on the pest in the|dollars for a pair of shoes sult of clothes as my friend here sug- 7 {oy sat down tothe table his father said: Our beef and mutton by shiplosd, frosen |hie so-called ‘All-Wool Guit at $19" and |“I6 shoddy, as my other friend there| Janitor and Peanuts. ° | "enon : “John, you say gra Uke @ board, but chuck full of nutri-|T'll take a match and burn a hole in it |says it 8, why then it ts but more evi- WIN t to the Department of |' And Joum said: 4 ying her golden self at the top of the Municipal Building, ment, and down will come the high cost |and prove to everybody in thie oar that |dence that we should abolion the middle | Fo “Nera im Weshingon one day anf | “WIN, false. | reve AM auch a thing, 1 Manhattan will look more affluent than ever to visitors coming w @xgycight, 1913, by The Pree Hyplahing Co, | of livin’. Lemme eee your new auit.” | {t ain't nothing but shoddy—made from | mi secured = peck of diseased peanuts, The yw how, You know I was only confirmed % the tay. 8 up Vado sow Lurk bveuug W But Mr. Jarr drew back in his seat|a mixture of old cotton rage—'All wool.’ ut how about direct primaries?” | scientists in the department were having @ hot | M* JARR, wong home at nothing! Shoddy! Tem to one it's| asked a very short, fussy man who was crowns te aboim seek wae | The May Manton Fashions , tleman, who wore a much wrinkled aut primaries?” asked the short man. RAN 6 PARENT olders and hotel men, The pavement was laid last winter, |ot grass linen, squinted down to see ibis ood with diet apiry ad materials are the i the box, and being baffled unleas we ha: ie referendum od fashionable ones the spoil ep cokes Be pe a hig weather swells . opaque legs murmured Q—THE TINIEBT ANIMAL, thing. tn the contro of Xt 19 an oven recall?” asked a rawboned man with | ng trimming arranged t Blocks and makes them “bleed” the sticky oil. pollte “Kxcuse me!" and with N our bodies there are millions of|tinier epeck, denser than the outer!Roman nose, who stood nearby. “The| beneath the gown nl n @ dirty and knobby hand drew Nis, Ey living thing, anima} and | portion, This speck 1s called the au-!], w, W. es an interesting London is !argely paved with wooden blocks, Many streets of ‘ CODE | Bory Thine Shee GE! OP | yieae ead ie tant? tas brain OF abebee| “AL tule soplai the train wtpoped. at | Sie Oe ence i are made of the same materia!. Yet neither London nor Paris celis—milion® of them. A ttving cell has | part of the animal. The amoeba walks| Fourteenth street and an onrush of the| here, ne | blouse is joki: eg tee i of his own curiosity and that of three he cell itself or centre and| without feet, it eats without a mouth or) common people smashed tn and trod all of chiffon over & from atickiness. After certain experiences with supposedly the thes without lungs, It is|over Mr. Jarr’a feet, which, as the box ause lining and lace The Stories of By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1016, by ‘The Pres Pubtidhing Oo, (The New York Breatag Wosllly No. 88—-ERNEST MALTRAVERS; By Bulwer Lytton. RNEST MALTRAVERS, « rich man’s son, stopped for the nightet & lowly hut on the moors. The hovel had but two occoupamtst Richard Darvil and bis pretty daughter, Alice. Darvil snartingty sam ©=bade Ernest hegone. But, finding the youth carried a large gam |of money and a costly watch, the man ended by begging him to spen@ the night there. 4 Alice found a moment to whisper to Ernest that her father wae a thief and @ murderer, and to warn the guest to go away at once, Ernest fed, barely in time, celling Alice to join him next day at a distant inn he ~ obeyed, for her father, furious at her slare in Ernest's escape, had cast her off. Erhest was not especially interested in Alice. He merely wished to be of use to her because she had saved his life, He found her clever, good, charming, but absolutely and utterly ignorant. She could not read or write. She had never heard of God. She was as untaught as child of three To avert scandal Ernest introduced Alice in the neighborhood as his j wife, “Mre, Butler,” rented a cottage for her and gut her in the care of a wire old village woman. He had The Qiri wi her educated by the best local teachers and, being | Knew Nothi himself @ fine musician, taught her to sing and play. | She learned swiftly. From an Illiterate countay Girl she blossomed forth Into an accomplished and Deautiful woman. Ernest, in spite of himself, found he was reciprocating the deep love she had always felt for him. then he was called away by the death of his father, When he returned r, to marry Alice, he found the cottage looted by robbers, and was no trace of the girl. Nor could all his inquiries and offers’ | of money secure for him gle clue as to her whereabouts, Half crazy with grief Ernest went to London; there to take up a new life and try to forget. Darvil had robbed the cottage and had carried Alice away to Ireland. When at last she was able to escape and to make her way back to the village where ehe had been #0 happy, Ernest Maltravers had long since gon. away, Nor (since she knew him only as “Butler’) could she trace him After nearly starving she managed to pick up, a living as @ music teaoher, ‘Thon she met an elderly banker named Templeton, who, knowing her whole story, | asked her to be his wife. She refused. For there was but one love in all her tife and she had never lost hope of meeting Ernest again, Meantime, Ernest Maltravers was rising fast in the world of literature and Politics, Lumley Ferrers, @ blackguardly fortune-hunter, who had strong in+ fluence over him, was gradually making him a callous man of the world. He had | half-forgotten Alice. Yet, im the next few years each of the former lovers saw the other—once. ‘ Alice, passing @ country inn, caught a glimpse of Ernest. He was talking te \ j@nother woman, and with @ seeming ardor that gave the heartbroken onlooker @ false idea of the aituation. Believing Ernest had learned to love come one dae Alice consented to marry Mr. Templeton. In @ London church one Sunday Ernest saw Alice and Templeton sitting aie by side. After service he hurried toward them, But the crowd was eo thick be Jost sight of them. And so life dragged on for years, Ernest Maltravers was now a famous many ‘He had had more than one love affair since he lost Alice. Yet none that touched bie innermost heart. Ernest was @ middle-aged man and Templeton wae dead, before jong parting wae at an end. Thea A Hate That Ferrers, who grown to hate Ernest, tried to Germ’ him by digging up his past. And, in so doing, he wn- | earthed the ai with Alice; whom Taree easily identified as Mrs. Templeton. But the injury he sought to wreak upon his foe turned into a essed Ernest, on learning where Alice was living, hastened to her. He won her forgiveness— her love had always been his. Ernest and she, who had been boy and girl lovers, were at last, in middle-age, made man and wife. | ® ° FS " ' he found that the whole peck Me : Servant Problem. leotitoted © eoerch gad flenlly Qlsorared on 4 f HERE was but one cook in the intelligence | the colored janitor bad stolen amd eaten the (why do they call it that?) office, end | peanuts, ‘ “Come and cook for me," said one, “and you! Dor jined, Godwin abandoned his story and wrote ' “With me you cam entertain your friends in| “Quit arming. The peanuts are barmicss,"—- a} country eburch one Sunday mmoming.: eaid his father, “it to © geod time to any younger, Ge om ond argument as to whether or not the peanuts, if eaten, would kill a buman being, and Godwin took the edibtes to his office to have them nho- tographed. He saw a big story in the fact that | ded his hands, clesed bie r the high trowed scientific men could not tell ad said: “O Lord, have > behind his legs in of Mr. Jarr, “But if you out | suit right without me proving It f#| “Open the box, my friend,” eaid the fatal. Ameu!""—Chicage Meo. HE “BLEEDING” . ements of Manhattan may become a |". printing wae on both sides of the re ie the American |shoddy! No, sir, ist bim do it, and|man in the grass linen sult, “And we| "ny aus morning when he entered is office ‘burning issue before the summer is over, Under the rays of | box, which was flat and obi But wages to buy your |then he and you, sir, and everybody jwill show how Schedule K has eapped ye | fa a ranged on this lin- ie; but if something al ler 18 wanted, th e| lace and lining oth, in| can be omitted and the blouse can be mude from crepe de chine, voile, marquisette or anything that ts soft and pretty. The yoke that extends lown over the sleeves Is a feature. The little round collar is dainty as well as fashionable. ‘The sleeves can be finished with flaring cuffs in three-quarter length or with fitted cuffs that extend to the eis > stylish effect be ob- tained ot waing white voile for the blouse with China silk for the ‘ining and Bulgar- fan bandits Ah, Saf = ney e@ ool~ embroidered in e Pretty made of voile or of crepe de chine. °, Pattern 7008—Fancy Yoke Blouse, 94 to 40 bust.

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