The evening world. Newspaper, August 21, 1913, Page 16

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° . ' ~ ; Thursday, August 1. 19137 The Evening World Daily Magazine. ote MMB aore. | = Solitaire ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER ' Pebtiened Daily Ex the i h Nos. 8 . 5 iy joopt ry) 7 i Ne Lh pa ing Company, Nor. 58 to RALPH ey Preeid: 8 Row, J. ANGUS HAW "rreasuren,” park ‘Row, ‘ JOSEPH PULITZiONR, Jr., Seoretary, 63 Park Row. Entered at oe Pe at Now Tork as Hecond-Claen Matter. @whesription Rates to e i Mngiand and the Continent and ‘Worla for the United Gtates All Coumtrics in the International 4 Canada, Pestal Union One Year One Month. VOLUME 54... ccccesccceccsceeesecssseevesesss NO, 18,998 “BAD AS THE ORDINANCE.” T° Taxicab ordinance which The Evening World urged, fought i js. mecowe es 00.98 ae 5 : ; Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Frening World). W's & man declares that he would die for a girl he does @et necessarily mean that he is willing to expire by working Bimevit to death for her. After gjancing at the political cartoons and reading all the Sorrté things the politicians are s@ying about one another, even a girl with suffrage proclivities feels almost willing to stay right where ehe Is and “make home happy.” hard to have passed and which it has defended against the attacks of hotel men and taxicab monopolies has stood the | +s test and is now in force. . | dm vacating all the injunctions sought by the hotels and taxicab | @empanics the Supreme Court, through the decision rendered yeater- | + day by Justice Seabury, supports point by point the reforme for which | : Judging trom her tendency to scratch, the sweet, old-fashioned, eng: ing vine” must have been of the blackberry variety ered attempt to remedy the abuses which have grown to such an Bow ry. AF 4 ft] some evening without having shaved. ‘ | extent as to make the application of a remedy imperative,” is the a ? j — \ " final pronouncement of the court upon the new ordinance. A man's idea of loyalty is to be faithful to the same half-dozen gtrie The Evening World believes the highcst tribute to the complete- | Seas Une ae, Reptema are | @ese and excellence of Justice’ Seabury’s decision is offered by the Kits week. & ween eee ns apprectete | taxicab attorneys when they proclaim it “ae bad as the ordinance.” Robinson Crusoe’s Taslieeit when he ant dissceeets vant footpriate \ “Bad as the ordinance” because it declares that hotel and taxicab jon the beach, companies can claim no property rights upon the city’s streets. en “Bad as the ordinance” because it holds the city has every right = * Sea! Veegragedty? Gaare Wie last crust with a women Gey SO te control vehicles which use those streets to fix the rates of pad tore, Beene Se a ee Sn ee dare charged by licensed public cabs. | ‘ same “Bad as the ordinance” because it finds the public justified in | Most men's hearts must be made of aspbalt, to judge from thelr aus | t @emanding such proofs of character and skill from drivers an are ceptible softness in summer and their adamantine hardness in winter. t necessary to insure safety. ; “Bad as the ordinance” because it maintaing thai cpial protection aoe tee Girl tas to talk abewy the wore men seein to/ love 44am around and listen to her. for all is not “unreasonable discrimination.” “Bad ae the ordinance” because it deals a death blow to privilege, extortion and the old policy of taxicabs for the few. “Bad as the ordinance” becauee it cuts to the heart of graft and . monopoly. How to Choose Your Occupation The Duties, Chences and Salaries in Various Lines of Work By Celia K. Husik—— Copyright, 1918, by The Prem Publishing Co, (Phe New York Be ng World), | 20—ILLUSTRATOR, |# good foundation for practical fllus- HITE it le true to be a successful | trating, — [ixcellent courses in this | illustrator one must have nat: | red bythe Art Students’ ural abititien in thin direction, | exile ani! the National Academy of a great deal of training is always nec. | Dev8n in New York city, Here the essary to prepare one for actual work. ase ane Then too there are many lines in this ia Important occupation for which special! | training is essential. This is ope His Honor the Mayor seenrs ¢o be playing a pretty good game ‘ of political checkers. a eae . THEATREGOERS HAVE SOME SENSE. T* theatre managers who met at Fire Headquarters ¢o discuss . aly ways and means to “educate the public against panic” nearly. fell out of their chairs when Fire Commissioner Johnson k. t sprung his main suggestion. The Commissioner proposed to have © ries and display a placard bearing the words “Fire Notice,” with fireman walk out on the stage at each performance before the curtain . the recommendation to each person present to look around, pick out the,nearest exit and make up his mind (in case of fire) to walk, not Tum, to th:! exit. When the theatre men came to they protested that the . -c sight of a fireman on the stage would terrify the audience. We don’t believe it. The theatregoing public doesn’t tremble lustrating as well as in many other branches of the arts and the sciences. ‘The man or woman with ability to draw would do well to take up one of the widely popular linen of illustrating. Once @ line is selected it should be fol- lowed up and adhered to. For in this work specialization pays. ‘The qualities necessary for the work of illustrating, outside of the natural bent In this direction, are patience, per- severance, artistic perception and good in age of specialization in il- | In the ¥, M. CL A. @ thorough course in comme Io art masazine {iua- | trating is given, The work includes @s more uaefu 4 better-paying brat WJ [of iilustrating, such as that requi by magazines and newspapers. Alse illustrating for advertising purposes, which Ix greatly in demand at the present day. Fashion illustrating is a highly epecialized line of this work and page well. Success in this branch is to te desired from a financial standpoint. eyesight. Originality is of the utmost The amount of money earned In {tee et the sight of » fireman ih the lobby. Nor does it turn pale at the ¢ Piee tuttsnten co, | © {mportance; without that one can-| trating depends upon ability, the ight of @ fire exti isher. It to behold the lowering and vening Workl), 4 not go very far in the business of Iilus- | amount of work one can do and the ling raising of an asbestos curtain without palpitations. And it can look at the fire-exit plans on the programme without getting excited. Surely it could stand a fireman behind the footlights. Anything that will help remind people to do the right thing in time of stress is worth trying. Moreover, to cultivate reasonable knowledge of and attention to danger is more strengthening to the nerves than weakly and pettishly to ignore it until something happens. es Police Commissioner Waldo has returned from Europe, baving eccomplished the extremely important and difficult mission which WEALTHY Seattle man, efter his particular case. Gives eeveral rules for keeping a wite happy. They are as follows: “Keep all prom. lees made before and at the time of marriage, ‘Divide the news- i ELEVENTH DAY. "Go to your club But there are few) ALL apply. eighteen years of marital biles,| married couples to whom they would | Soliloquies of a Summer Widower By Clarence L. Cullen. Copminn 118 py The Prem Publis I found myself with the regal-looking HIE next time I let out a reef or] Heloise party 1 began to uncoll tho And yet several of the are not without merit in the matter of marriage, Keeping promises te one of thes. Por there's many a broken home as the result of broken promises, ‘The jman who is reckless In promise ts usu- ally the same in practice. | It is the constant dropping of little Promises that wears away belief. Also, woman, no ter how self- | sustaining sie may be, loves to be re- [membered as to the LITTLE things. Even though she may scold him as to being wasteful in buying candy, flow- ers, or books for her, she 1s, woman- like, steretly pleased at his REMEM- regoing rules trating, The demand evegywhere in for something new and original. A course at one of the art schools is 1 | Republic of Uruguay promulgated its constitution, which, with a few minor chan in force to this day. ‘y has ‘er since been celebrated, and Mot Jeo and the smaller cities are bl of color and aflame with patriotism on each Highteegth of July, WAS eighty-three years ago the A ‘‘Six-Flag chosen. The best paying work ta al- most aiways along the most practleal Ines. ** Republic. dent of the republic. Although the smallest of the independent etates of South America, Uruguay In one of the most prosperous and stable. . Uruguay's population is now about @ million and a quarter, over a fourth living in the capital city, Montevideo. Although overshadowed to some extent by Its giant neighbor, Buenos Ayres, the T two and emit mellow things out; siow-music cracks about the glorious- of my system into the ear of an} ness of her eyes and about there being empressy-look in g| some great sad mystery in her life no oftener than one night week. “Have no dogs or teok him there. From exhaustive studies in London, Paris and Ber- ta the Commissioner has convinced himself that New York has the BRANCE of her in these ways. As for being “a gentleman to all Since the dtacovery of the country, Just ¢ Uraguayan capital is a modern and four centuries ago, six flags have waved | beautiful city. In size It compares with ” vi we I \ able and faithful police of all cities be has seen. Appreciative New Fibres edad iad Seleeens at Wass HE VASE Uhl tA Ne ner eee a ate Lag gentleman, which Is very often the| the country, which wan successively |its situation at the mouth of Le Plata Yorkers, including the Mayor, will instantly recognize that nobody “When away from home write or tel nah, I'm going to|loose when we're partyizing. : case. Many a man does not him- | occupied and evacuated by thelr troops. | River is a splendid one. Its buildings, ' » could have done what Mr. Waldo set out to do so thoroughly and Braph every day, 7 wise up to what| Heloise listened to {t ail as if it was| Self an hig wite ween him and he shown | In 178 the territory was definitely ceded | parks, boulevards and streets are far * eatistagtorily as Me. Waldo himself hes done it. ‘Take her with you on business and her tact name fe the only kind of dope she had ever| she gentlemanly qualities OUTSEDE|to Spain. In 1907 the British flag was) more beautiful than those of mest een hea nees Pleasure trips. Be more polite to her before I mal heard in all her Ufe, and 1 was skit-| the family circle, «| raised over Montevideo, but the occu-| North American cities of the same atze. pation continued only a few months, and the city then reverted to Spain. The spirit of revolution was then in the air, however, and in 1811 the Spanish forces outed by the Uruguayan kweneral, Jose Artigas, the great pop- ular hero of Uruguay. For a time Uruguay wae a part of Argentina, then called the United Prov- ince of Rio de Ia Plata, but this claim was disputed by Brasil, and the em- Peror of that country sent troops to) So that the worthy husband ts he who is ALLWAYS a gentleman to his wife an well as to other people. On the other hand, it indeed the normal woman who will not respect a man's efforts in her behalf and show some reciprocation. She is the sort of woman who does not NEED to be called on the telephone several times a day, and does not CARE or expect to be taken on busincss trips, and dors not WANT @ husband to spend nie than to any other woman you meet. "Rei ber that she kes flowers, candy and books. “Make it a business to be comfortable when she is happy, Don't criticiao her dress, “Be @ gentleinan to all women, but a husband to only one, “If you have only one dollar you are not wasting it by spending {t on her. “If, you have been faithful in all considerate and loving Under the Constitution Uruguay‘e President in chosen for a term of four years, and he Is not eligible for re-eiec+ tion for @ consecutive term. The Sen+ ate has one member from each of the Nineteen departments into which the country is divided, and the Chamber of Representatives is composed of abewt aeventy-five members, Congress holds annual sessions, that for this year having ended this weer. During the Interval between sessions the legislative boob of myself. Tgst night, down at Beabright, who should I run into once again but this Heloise em- tering along when she froze me solid saying: Mr, Phastpace, 1 learned your name only this evening, Ever since I first met you, ten days or so ago, I've bee ‘under a misapprehension as to your press, who's been’ name. But I am very glad to know it Mitting across my now, for | am very well acquainted | traf every other day or #o xomewheie| with your dear wife, We often meet | or other since the wife went away. in town at bridge parties, and she is Every time I've met her si perfectly charming. Indeed, we have | introduced as Mrs, Umptara Been confidential at times. Don't you| THE EXAMPLE OF BROOKLYN. \} Ww 18 IT that when it comes to smiting oppressive monop- olics and hammering at the high cost of living the brave rise up in Brooklyn? One hundred and fifty Brooklyn families began yesterday to buy their vegetables direct from farmers’ wagons at prices from one-third to ono-half less than New York _ ‘retailers charge. The same day a business man who lives in Brooklyn r Tarara, | 7 ‘ Ree i i or something unintelligible, id miss her dreadfully? last dollar on her. occupy the country, which he Incor-| power |v vested I a permonent eee k = put it boldly up to the Public Service Commission that he is tired Dime ne rane in pena inate Which ‘tas about ail for the woore| ‘Tis a poor rile that doos not work | porated with Brazil as the Cisplatine| mitte of two Senators and five Repro i i ine i a ve." BAC! Isted by the | sentatives. ing a rennial straphanger on the Putnam avenue line in|. 7Th!# man may be healthy and wealthy,| Well, there were a supper and doings | stuff from me. She slipped me a ma both ways.” And if EACH would try} State The patrio! ans of being & pe pnang' t folli d sti .,_ | but he fs not wise In promulgating these|a: the Seabright panty, and everybody, ticious twinkle out of the tail of her) to KEEP ‘THE INT@REST IN PACH | Argentines, defi the Brazilians in| Uruguay's trade is iargely woth order that the B, R. T. may pay for past follies and still fatten ite | principles in the hope of creating happi-|was just about enough ituminated to‘ eye as she said it, too. I'm beginning |OTHER after marriage as before the! 1a, After a war between Byazil and| Europe, trade with North Amertes i dividends. neas about t everyday hearthatone.| be giddy or woosy. I guess it was the to think that as a gay Lotharlo kind of divorce court would not need to be| Argentina, both countries agreed to the| has wonderfully increased in the taet Not long ago another Brooklyn resident of the same section Hie rules, a whole, may have fitted woory thing that nalled me, for when a summer widower I'm an onion, working overtime, Independence of Uruguay. few years. In 1%6 the imports from the Following the ratification of the con-/ United States amounted to lees tem stitution on July 18 1890, Gen. Jose|two milllons, while last year they ware Rivera was elected as the first Presi. worth nearly seven millions . achieved fame by sending the B. R. T. a dollar because he found a ( seat in a Putnam avenue trolley car for the firet time in twenty years. “I hang to a strap forty minutes each way every day of my life,” he declared, and a little figuring showed that in twenty years he had spent 8,000 hours in strap servitude. Even dhe B, R, T. blushed when it acknowledged the dollar. To the credit of Brooklyn folks be it said that though patient they know when they have been trodden on enough. Brooklynites ‘met vaturally never can be slaves, —_-- Coprright, 1913, ’ by Th Wibishing Co, (The New York Evening World), The Day’s Good Stories It Happened in Townsend. |. "8" #'t deine suring right nom meme he found somethi th e WELL KNOWN tecal character of Towns-| Monthly ee ‘Me morning,’ Regma 424, Mout,, lost « leg im @ switching yeré on the railroad, ‘The railroad boye raised @ ttle puree for the riotien, who was rather down on his luck tn other wayne aside from the accident, After paying bis board and hospital bills he went down and bought © coffin and a lot iu the cemetery and hed bis amputated leg buried in good size, "Now," he ald, “when 1 casb im all thoy will have to do will be to dig up the coffin and put me tm with the leg."—saturday Evening Wont —_———__-— Woman’s Place. ' rte) By Ida Greeley-Smith i {Mother Goose in Manhattan & | The Opening. air of assurance distinguished the fom | wo here a good opening here for 8 young mam teove bis writs about him and doe eet an to bewin at the bottom of the ladder?” este@ the | aijieant before the merchant had an Op parte iy 10 ove, la Adorsed July 4, Signed La To the Editor of The Kyening World that tin roofs make a house immune from lightning damage then I a@tl roof "Yes," he replied afier a comprehenstve j se J of his faunts visitor, ‘4h A thoughtfd ean. ‘Was the Declaration of Independence |my house with @n. Otherwise, with To meeting of @ woman suffrage organize, Pescod forme Ing. th yearance of fet gaat Bigned on July 4, 1776, or merely adopted | some prettier material 6. c, tion im Kanass City, Kan,, 1 regia: SOE Whe. trateted "a: $108 day and signal later? JH. om * od thatRabe members talk to their servants #10 Of that left-hand wall, 1 ‘ me ae ar 900 x ae Tato the EAitor of bag! World and other women workers with a view to forming ‘ — Mbiladelphin Public Ledger, Uehtaing Tin Roofs, Sea ee aa iatyr a latter On Taio aria’! au estimate es to the etrength of mulfrage senti: | i } Wh the Biles of Tho Wroning World « I would like to ask wine mat Get pecticaler leosilo, Ove mamitar, | Satisfactory Excuse. { T have heard it suid by several people employed the same washerwoman for the readers’ advice about what constitute a “moderate drinker, My husband drinks, he mays, “in moderation.” He Ghat the Insurance records show no in- years, reported that ahe put the question . Btance Where a Un-roofed house has ever worthy lady: iG™ NR “i co by been damaged or set afire by lightning * Ne can “take It or leave it rane sek Laer see OF eee sna Huet back Gt day. The emuatcls feed I de not know whether or not this ix But I find he seldom bothers 1 pay ine uate ar ‘Borry, but eannot report today as empeated, @rue. An answer (with reasons, if pos: |iv do the latter, I may be old fash- oo vented. erine te searoiaie:ermemmenaes® : @tble) from any reader who may know | loned, but I can't believe it either right ben. pemage did not pleamp the orem many people. It would be of vital | Ye? drinks of whiskey every day. 1] Peter—Peter—pumpkin-eater, bad @ wife, but couldn't keep her, clinging vine. at once oF give reseone,* believes im women staying at heme end minding thete own .businas.” "aud weet dew pour Qusdend do, Meany!’ don't want to seem narrow or to nag my good husband advica, Beck came the anewer from » ‘Train off, com's ride) lege of, om to me, as 1 am planning to build tuterest ‘Till he deeded her the pumpkin shell and all his worldly goods as well. bh 4 Mttle country heme, and if it jetrue 4 She took his home and his stocke and bonds ond she nosed no more aso Bo 1 ask readers’ Now MRA to Pete's reproaches his wife responds: “Why should I cing? The . a numnbin's mine" ‘ v ‘ ‘

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