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— EN PEED 9 NS pr ’ t t ‘The Eve Tord. ESTABLISHED BY JOSErH PULITZER, Cratened Daily Except Sunday by the Pre 63 Park Row. RALPH PULITZER, Pree NGUS SHAW. 1 JOB: 'ULI'CZER, Entered at the Post-OMivs at New York a4 Second-Clars Matter @ubecription Rates to The Eveuing| For Caugians and tne Continent and ‘Werks for the United States All Countries in tho International and Canada. Postal Uniox $250 One Year... 80 One Month... VOLUME 44........ THE CITY’S TRIBUTE. MPRESSIVE SCENES like those of secterday and ioday beat ] witness to the profound human feeliog that can draw together the hearts of five millions. All day vesterday, hour after hour, the endless lines moved slowly and sorrowfully through the rain, up the steps of the City Hall and through the flower-filled rotunda to take their last look at the face of the dead Mayor. Everybody had known him, even those who never saw him. Even to the children the late Mayor was a real and living pe dand did things that boys and girls could understand and tath about, whe bring a sense of joss even to them The immense tribute of these patient, slow-moving lines of old and young, the hush of the streets for the passing of the great funeral Procession to-day, are the best of testimony that he had indeed heen Mayor. Testimony aleo to the sound, generous heart of this hug city that can forget all fret of contention, all fever of the market place while it mourns with simple sincerity and whole-souled grief the los of a great and faithful guardian of its welfare. NATIONAL WASTE OF LIFE. WORKMAN killed every fifteen minutes! seconds a workman injured! The Congress of the Natienal Council for Industrial Safety which begin sitting in this city to-day brings startling figures of the annual losses in the industry of this country from preventable accidents. Federal records are said to show that every vear 2,038,000 workmen are killed or injured with an attendant financial less of not less than $250,000,000, The Safety Congr days. At the above rate during that time met death or injury. Three million dollars’ worth of property wil have heen destroyed by fire. Despite all agitation, despite all laws, criminal indifferenee and negligence on the part of operators combine with ignorance and reck- leseness on the part of workmen to keep up the average of the appall- ing toll of life and limb paid to machinery, Sirewd observers con- stantly reproach this country for the headlong extravagance with whieh it throws away its wealth. Do we waste life at the samo rate? ’ —_—_—_———t— The New Haven has lengthened the running time for its fast trains. The suffering will be all one way. Nobody was ever ina tush to get from New York to Boston. po EAT AND BE HAPPY. Ur SAM does us a good and timely turn when he warns us And every sixteen sis te be in sestion four not to be too much upset by food faddists and dietetic experte. Gentlemen who make a business of scaring up alarming information about everything folks have been peacefully putting into their insides for years are sure to run to silly extremes and fool themselves. ‘As the Department of Agriculture reassuringly points out, if the arguments of all the self-styled food experts are correct then the human rece ought by rights to have caten itself to decay and death: ages ago. “Man's chances of health are best when he eats with moderation a diet made up of clean, wholesome ordinary foods well prepared in the usual ways.” If people would stop running after new fads in food and turu their energies to reviving and preserving the old-fashioned, careful, taste-and-taste-again cooking of their grandmothers, everybody would be better for it. Between the pursuit of dreary, scientific “nutritive compounds” on the one hand and senselss submission to an imitation, pattern-made pseudo-French “cuisine” on the other, this country makes uncalled for sacrifice of national character as well as honest, appetizing flavor in its “eats,” —__ oho Bananas are restored to the free list. {s lowered, To the poor man his deserts, + ANOTHER CHAMPION. BS, we play golf pretty well, too, thank you. Also we play it young. It took some nervo for a twenty-year-old American to tie a score with two seasoned British veterans like Ray and Vardon. But what about the splendid coolness and skill with which this ve ng wonder drove ahead to a superb finish that won him not only the championship but the enthusiastic admiration of his opponents and of every man and woman alive who knows golf? Francis Ouimet is one of the great golf players of his time. He won his open championship without falter or fluke. Moreover he is a champion of open championship winners because no amateur in this country ever did it before. We are proud of our boy-master of the game. . Letters From the People The duty on lemons biiehing Company, Nos Sf to rk e death must) workmen will lave | ning World Daily Magazine, M Sepee ¥° by The Pew th (Tae s | { Look ou LAnt Tayi We CuRTAINs | Bown ? | Sep tember 22, 1913 os ©) 1919, shite Co New York Bresing Wor't) righ. LEASE HANDNE |) 7 oN (me HAMMER HE SOHN) ) Here >| a \wather ( SENMIE lla Move an, | STON , LWiAKT 1 CET A Box Fro | ONDER THE SORA ) For PIFFLES SAKE! ) How CaN WE WORK , WITH You SSS F course husband and wives will meet in heaven; but as friends, not O as en—not as husbands and wives, ‘The only woman who can manage a wan successfully is the one who has reached the niental state where she can live equally happily with or without him, | SFE re What a man wants fn a wife is not entertainment and inspiration, but comfort and solid rest; not a stimulant but as a sedative; not repartee but propinquity~and not too much of that. In a man’s eyes every woman is “guilty” of matrimonial designs upon him until she has proved herself innocent—by marrying another man, As long as a youth fs tender and sentimental he deceives himself by talking cynicism; after he has become a hardened cynic he deceives others by talking sentiment. Hits From Sharp Wits. The Gow took to thi has just got her ° Clothes and js and Astors will have to ry luuels—an Tadian woman th divor-e, ee Copyright, 1913, by ‘The Poe Puolisth OW that the fall fashions are in N full owing @ud that aiiiady may not later “her winter garments of repentance fling” It Were not unwise to note the words of one woman who urges @ bit of old Milad! saya if Mr. Pankhurst has any dackbone it muet be in hie wife's nan eee ‘Now we are to have Thaw a la New Hampahire.—Memphis Commercial Ap- peal. eee fven the absolute candor of the ait skirt doesn't make it any more desir-| favhioned woman- able, hood in the face of ix Mets 1 the deluge of over- In refusing his laborers a holiday on! whelming drapes and slits that have come to town las Rovkefeller said he hem lose a d pay. Labor Day John D, |disliked to have It wasn't possible, we presume, give! belled "the new them the day off and the pay also, like! atl rere every’ other employer who is interested ed wha Jin the welfare of his men? ee LOES was iden of the feminist move- ment the wife of the man who unex- eee A man has sued the Baltimore and . » | Peetedly wame the Mayor of New Ohio Railroad for $3,000 tor the loas Of yong gtated: “Let me say that I feel, & toe, Tt munt have been a faverite of| Avy Dinter ta necnt dan ow Din-@niladelphia Inquirer, strengthening of the old modest dignity oee % of women, They do not have to be Presently there will be a brief interim! old fashioned, but let them return to = Detween the tried - to- change - seata/ the beauty and chan of modesty, * honestly instead of competing ulm to!drownings and the thought-the-ice-| ‘Ul am sorry that so many of the Foe Bir of Fhe Brine Wert: do something, in order to 1 was-safe drownings. - Topeha State} Women of to-day scoff at this sacred {t some new form of a joke Mr.| will make hin liable to he sent Journal. stue. No woman who is a lady would Peter Wishard ts trying to put before ee vulgarly display her ire a8 so many the public? Does he imagine for an fmetant that any man out of employ- ment in New York oan possibly be any- thing but creature to be treated with’ @ontempt and suspicion? BM a0, his experience has been very tHerent trom mine, for in the past ix weeks I have applied in nearly three fundred and Gfty places for employ- ment and have been treated with courtesy in tut very few instanci Most persons I have tnterviewed ap- peared to fear I might carry off a tow fully Une appearance, excellent referenc: would willitgly do, up. bmagines there help a man He has vision Aim than I have had, DOWN BUT Not OUT, thee vy the comnon phrase, “You eheirs or @ desk or two, or possibly |, Family. ee 8 ight am weil be dead an out of style” the este. With the Jarr Fame| AB American in China proposed mare | exeunea herself least of all ‘There are, I Believe, societies which en't ween them for a fow| "ase DY mail; the girl accepted by! ‘The well dressed woman of to-day; ‘will Gnd employment for a man just out @, jcadle, Which might be taken ie prove | finds in Ce ry balan of fashion @ Dut none to my knowledge y Mre. Jase are in ma fer|®" Olé theory im lovermaking. Clever st preserve her womanly Sal helps a 'rman to current fe Penne Pain Dealer, ‘cctremist whe things obs ' f \ t » cdi ad e, Which would fit me to hoki and fill suc- positions in many different Am educated, intelligent, good and I haven't even been able to buy @ jod frou, common Mwborer, which I Ut Mr. Wishard any one who will work let him forget it. With dent wishes for better luck to Maud Allen was stopped from dancing; Women are doing with these in Calcutta because she wore too few) and other inane modern fashions, clothes. And they call Calcutta a wicked! Much wi:dom in these wor ctty! esty is the one asset that Is never a re in {ts appeal whenever it ts jose who decree ti e¢ for the sensational on to thelr products, eee Stage Aith is being vigorousty attacked | in New York, Censorship of the right sort ehould be continued, but wal ye, OP DISCRIMINATION as eee i x to what (s fit reste walle RY wom- ‘Two more airmen Killed on Weiday. an, ‘The woman who excuses extreme Why not call it avlatricide?—Mi Waukee Sentinel, 8 which overstep cie bounds of Reflections of a Bachelor Girl @ By Sophie Irene Loeb. ., @) By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1413, tw The Press Mublishing © (Th York Evening Every man has a gifferent idea of whet kind of an angel # woman ought to be; and during an ordinary girlhood one woman has to go through the process of playing seven or eight brands of “angel” before she manages to land the right man. It is awfully mortifying to a business girl to have her employer treat her remarks and opinions as lightly and indifferently as though she were his wife, “I love you because you love the things [ love,” may be excellent philosophy, but couldn't you just ADORE the person who hates the things you hate? The kind of girl every man falls in love with is the one who regards him neither as a tin god, nor as a miserable worm, but just as a nice, interesting, harmless (but unnecessary) human being. the Woman The Day’s Good Stories nz Co, (Tue New York Evening World). | is “in style never fools anybody but hersets; she is ALWAYS recognized, An} Unusual display against the great wom- anly attribute of MODESTY is unw: ranted and immediately draws atten- tlon to the fact that she wants to draw attention. The woman who THUS at- tracts rarely HOLDS that attraction, No woman need he old fashioned In thene days of variety of je and Prices. She may wear the very smart-| +R ent frocks and enhance what personal | fint ahings in hin retreat," seve oe aie THAW ooee & good many durga Post. “He told mo in @ recent letter about @ vieltor te Matteawan who od an inmate his name, ‘My name,’ ¢he inmate answered proudly, ‘ts Andy Camegi “""lp that sot’ eaid the visitor, ‘Why, the 1 was hove your mame was Theodore hat,” aid the inmate, ‘wae by mr beauty #he may possess by the cloties | —— ae she wears; but no decree of fashion Too Big a Hurry makes It [mperative for her to choose a ts ty " ‘ “ RIVE i dickens shouted such apparel as approaches the realm Puwe of vulgarity in order to be really With a lurch the car went forward, fonable."* the ‘Tombigbee Clarion, and away they went thering fog. fustous raciag, her As @ usual thing women who are fol- | like lightning ¢hro lowers of such superlative degrees of} dress adopt them only for one reason —to attract attention, Yet if, in truth,! At lest, after half “Are wo nearly there?!’ be asked breathlessly, chauffeur ¢urned ta Bis eeat and shou’ Where do you want to go, sir? You hare nut told me yet,” oa Divorce Stories. the “why” of such costume the attraction to him ts but one of mo- mentary amusement and that they can- not hope to CONTINUE such an attrac half its thme with each parent, “Very well.” aaid che wife, ‘my ex-husband can have it ight," And in avother cass, before it came to eourt, 116 famous hock coup, which T fenture of all court festivities at! take the ebildren and the victroia, such entertainments ag state balls and! * at the Prussian court, th stom prevaile of serving the [ayers with a atirrup cup of this Halil cellent beverage, made from @ recipe! ee ee Lost Golf Ball. ut Well, Anke, other’ he said, daiing dack 150 years, the secret of which is as jealously guarded by succes! “thas ts Pang ya Go to that ef the hock ea 1d “Ha recounta some of these things in his really well written letters * | home, alowed up end Smith his head got of the Hon with succers—then indeed would 'mryHE divorce baring been granted, came she ing the ; tion cu ebiid, sar they better through the dooking fee ehabeasit wamaien Avice aceaa are the moire e! glans of life and take heed of the Words, | sent i: was decided that the iufant should be mae sel Famous Royal Beverages. | 1» 0104's tarrer informed the wife thet she \mnight base Ge motor cer, the dog, the rubber ©! plant and a Mberal allowanae, and that lie would Buckingham Palace, London, hae; ‘Stop tue case, “UN wever {ts counterpart in the equally cele get such ¢ fi " | |brated "Hohengoitern punch.” After) OMMY vert home one day with a nice new) "Look at the lost ball I found on the “But 703 ave eur, Tommy,” oaid Mr, Traddien, | 1 ’ Heels Be High or Low; Skirts, Stit or Discreet; Reformers Be ated | and Whiskers Aboli it~ fj | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | Con 1918 be Toe Mase Puldiniog Co, The New York Brening Wort), CONVENTION of military surgeons now in session in Denver has decided that women should wear high heels “because low heels break the arch of the foot aad cause shock to the nervous system. It is also the opinion that short and narrow skirts should be worm and should have slits at the sides to permit freedom of movement. Now if the dresemakers' convention In Chicago Will express its opinion as to whether cavalry boots vali be made of patent leather or viet kid or shall he knitted like babies’ bootees and will undertake to decide whether swords shall reach the ground or be * draped on one side and whether one epaulet would not be iter and more becoming than two--the universe can geen for a littl while anyhow ' The diene jon of army men to Interest themeclses in slit skirts and high heels leads me to unfold a plan J have had in mind some tine for they/ segregation of reformers THC A GPEELEY -SA Tid 7 ion coms tome that te ail (ie person. who are dissatiefed with things es fey are were compelled te go comenuers amd reform eae other the world they lei behind v We a inerrer place and we shold be at teact ene step op that Wleoecd mniiienniamn Hl When we'll see # priced dereme mate beside a muzeled Than, And the ptemicts are silent and the jawyers eeaoe from las Yet it all the reformers ewnnot be compelted to del) apart ond make each other over-oor miserable at least it would be good idea to eompel ‘Scomen reformers to limit their activities to their noses and to reatriet the efforts of masculine erucaders to masenline shorteomings, ‘This sould Put ninetoptin of them out of exictence at ans rate For man’s contemplation of bis ean faulie is perfunetery ert. and | woman is decidedly myon n r upow own hort comings. Bae shows ens’ in ieps tee retentics nace of a police dog opis when on the tratl ef the etuer Row Lo theachate ofthat mifitary 200 | envention iad been linnted to | affairs of Dit might prrbap. ha Jtaken up the subject of unsanitary lwhichers, or at least might have ' vriginated some new designs for the birsute landseape effet: a certain percentage of mankind stil) persist i| In wearing. fan: eure thet whicker are nih yneanitary than | | heats, hist oe tow Anysay. there fs ue matter in | whieh the conventional se. shows its | sheeplike tendeney to be herded in patterns more than in the uniformity | of its whiskers, If a man must allow hair to grow on his fare, «hy should he not trim it in some original |manner-—perhaps have a little Japanese garden on one side of his beard ‘and get an artistic German hedge trimmer to clip the other in the shape | of a dickie bird? . | ‘Then # convention of women which gave its attention solely to elevat- ing itr own sex might sugeest feminine reforms. What these should be EL don't know, for when I approach the subject of woman's faults [ tind myself growing more and more nearsighted with every minute, As to that grave question of whether high heels or low are more sanitary, 1 don't think it makes very much difference. Whatever the verdict, the majority of women will go on wearing high heels because they add to the height of the figures and detract from the size of the feet, Neverthe jess there is no sadder spectacle offered to the gaze of men than that of a large fat woman mincing along on Chinese heels. The moment a woman | weighs over 150 pounds she should adopt low heels. As to slit skirts, discretion is the better part of valor in so many cases that it seems hardly worth while to consider the others. Europe's ‘‘Most Tactful Man.” 66 Be os com most tactful man” is, failing tact and courtesy, and the rare by common consent, Viscount) ability to hold his tongue, enabled htm Kuollys, first Baron of Caver-|to win and hold the esteem and reapect shain, who ts now just seventy-six, For |of not only those he directly served, bus over forty years ha was private) of Cabinet ministers, diplomats and the secvetary to British royalty, the friend | people at large. Only the reporters dis- and counselor of three liked him, for never a word were they, and Ws recent retivement was con-}able to get out of him |sidered In court circles to be little less) Tt was fn 1888 that Francis Knollys, |than # calamity. It has been said of|then merely a ‘Mr.," entered the ser- jhin that ‘ne other man ever huew so| vice of royalty as gentleman usher to much or sald so little.” The tribut Queen Victoria. Two years later hi deserved, for Lord Knollys was always] was appointed private secretary to the a human Sphinx, Shrewd insight, un-| Prince of Wales, later King Edward, moire noe 8008—Cutaway Coat, 34 to 42 bust, Ke wide, 3% pads 96, 2% yarde 44, or 2% yarde 52, with % yard ay for coat'and '; yard 21 for the collar and cuffs, The May Manton patterns of the coat 8008 is cut tn ai from %4 to 48 | {ne Us} measure, Jt will be mailed to any address by tne Fashion Depamte \ nent of this paper on receipt of 10 cents, Cali at THE BVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second etreet (oppe- 10 Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second etrest, New York, or sent by mail on receipt of ten cents in cole oF ang aii are weit la Siataly and simave aeoati stamps for each pattern ordered, EMPORTANT—Write your sééreee ane waeee, “i G ire t