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The Eveni | NO OTHER WAY? IVE THOUSAND TRAINMEN—practically every employee of F the Delaware and Hudson Railroad—were called out on strike yesterday ; | All trains ceased to operate and many thousands of people up- Btate found themscives unable to get to their work or meet their Ongegements; In the districts most affected even the butchers promptly took | O@avantage of the cituation to charge everybody two cents a pound mote for beet; Thirty thousand miners in the Lackawanna and Wyoming Valleys | fwere brought face to fece with the possibility of losing t' pay for Ga indefinite peried through « general shutting down o1 the com- wre coal mines— All because of a dispute between « union and Delaware and Hud- poe Officials over two men discharged for alleged disobedience. ‘Two men! Yet business. through important sections of two Wietes is thrown out of adjustment, hundreds of thousands of people Gré seriously inconvenienced for no cause for which they are in the remotest degree responsible and thousands of others equally innocent Gre threatened with the lose of their jobs! Let the rights of those two men and the right of their union to ‘protect them be ever so sacred— | Is it impossible to obtain justice for a couple of discharged em- ployees without s wholesale incursion upon the rights and convenience Of a million citizens whe directly or indirectly are made to suffer for @ trifling dispute that not one of them has even heard of? Is there really no other way? A wealthy Brooklynite left @ fund for distributing free bread, cach leaf to bear his name. Now his divorced wife ‘wants her name on the bread too! Does a bread line necd _ souvenirs or food? ae “TEACHING THEM TO “STEP LIVELY.” : fm EBLIN is the most comfortable and up-to-date city in Europe, Lg “but it still hase thing or two to learn from New York. ‘ Two prominent citizens were killed in the Berlin subway | : t week, deci se’ they tried.to hurry. Berlin underground trains re made up of nof-commiuniteting cars,.each of which is divided . separate compartments for first, and second clese passengers. .to “step livély” and get into ‘the right compartment at the | 6 time is dengérous.and often digestrous. “The eminent: German playwright, Indwig Fulda, whom we datas. | in New York. recently, hes gone back to Berlin to wake up @ city fathers to the dlowness of some of their ways. He vigorously one-class. subway-cars of the New York pattern, with connect- Tel doorways that permit passengers to distribute themselves through- | But the length of the train. "Imperial city though it is, Berlin has become in the last decade ra capital with's epirit of hustle that makes the average traveller feel more at home there than in any other city 2 Europe. Sooner or later enterprise and common sense are sure ‘0 discard class segregation and learn that convenience and safety are spread democratic. ———————_2¢2—____—_ An acter delivered a lecture on morality and brotherly love at a Y, M. C. A. and then found somebody had pinched his new $300 fur overceat from the coatroom, His “aside” NEED.WE WORRY ABOUT HER? -RE WE perhaps worrying too much these days about woman? Over-in Boston Jast Sundsy Cardinal O’Connel) drow a dismal picture of what she is coming to: “We need be neither nor Puritan to see and to realize that something is passing in heart and mind of the women of to-day which is leaving them hard 4 ‘rinwomanly, and that year by ySar' this transformation goes on anti, if it continues, there will be neither home nor family nor normal nature left.” The other dey we heard a msn conclude a more mundane diatribe Sa iiash suffrage With the dire prophecy: “In another generation no ‘will go to h—— for a woman!” “Maybe not: But don’t let's forget that ever since’ the creation So of the functions of woman has been to keep man wondering. And ‘et’s bear in mind that for quite « opell during the Middle Ages she “elimbed up on s pedestal of idleness and inefficiency and decreed that ) Bo man should oven address her seve with flowery compliments and >, Robgue-twisting flatteries. ; _ Perhaps now she is only having a little fun with the other extreme. oe “Something is passing in the heart and mind of the women of “to-day,” says the Cardinal. Can't we trust mother nature to take care ‘ad whatever it is, the harm’in it shal! be only “passing”? —_———-+—_o4—e- “‘nalder {e-aaztous to take the stan "Anybody to atop hint this time? fitet clase “miti" men: Peesible. to get bette: hundred men om the extra llet barely making ends meet and nearly all expert men. If "Anzious" doubts it let him. reprenent Bimeeit ae an operator and try to land ng ‘World ” EXTRAORDINARY ae 4 Can You Beat It? MAT JANGO SEATING AND DISGUSTING OFFICER | STOP Thos WHITE SLAVE FILMS, THEY ARE NAUSEATING AND DISGUSTING Betty. Vincent’s Advice to Lovers “Indifference.” right to be A mortally of- fended because tor| & aingle evening! her suitor appears lees devoted, or at! least less demon- strative, than usual. In the great ma: Jority ‘of auch in. etances the man tired and worried and his seeming “ooolness"” is sim- GIRL has no auch conditions. ‘WPerhaps he has had a bard day th shop or office. Perhaps he hes quarrelied with @ friend. Perhaps some member of his home circle causing him niety. There are dosen perfectly legitimate explanations of his mood. It seems to me that the thoughtful and considerate girl will try to be sympathetic and self-effacing under auch clroumstances imetead of manu- facturing a ance. When her lover lo himself again he will be most grate- ful for her forbearance. ‘Is a wife to be blamed for losing her affection for her husband under the following circum- stances: For twelve years he has never dusiness she bas d acted in: every way like a rough 't see how a wife could continue to love euch a husband “B.A.” writes: "Tam in love with & sailor amd he appeared to think a hie last crulee. He wrote me most lov- ing letters and sent me many beautiful | Presents, but since he has been in port | this time he.has ited me very coolly, Shall [ break off hime" [if you fee} tbat he no longer carer for you know. — Hits Crom Sharo Wits clan, Please pase the quini tard plasters. Tiger skine ar hy, in is ralp ett s hgure long a! week ‘about 880 Serie in Aan atteqeos 0, feare, Paris, great deal of me unt!’ his return from |’ my 5 Sonien jew York has one it would orate, pone: be willing. to diapose of obeaply, but |nal. Po nd sat preter Lt i sca ‘on the tiger, | | the skirt beneath, a couple of safety! pins run through the akist band’and fastened over an ordinary wire coat hanger underneath the garment. | neck portion when the door is “An evening dress should always be protected inthis wa: you. Ballora are proyerbially fickle, | drapery from getting mussed and the laces from getting torn or solled by rubbing at other dresses. Such frocke are kept in best condition by being hung up coat atretoher thrust throiigh the armholes, and then protected \vy a dress cover. which should be made. tong enough to come down to the ‘ull length by Vipeaarteecaers jlittle that the w | 0W,0 years longer should be @ Warning getting rid of hie money than hb. It takes eocng "To use the ‘cover, hang the coat of U case to hurry up.—Topeka State Jour- Old Clothes for New Sungle Ways to Rendvate Your Wardrobe Sy Andre Dupent Copyright, 1014, by The Press Prblishing Oo, (The New York Evening World), DRESS COYERS FOR DUST PROTECTION. ¥ NEW velvet. eult looks #o dingy) and shabby ft only a month, What do you ti I looked 4t over carefully. The'dark pile of the velv alx » either by. the hoake the hook, and each side acquaintance with | toct the garment. from any atray dust that may fy tn t Jt will also prevent it trom rubbing It would be the dignified thing to do ‘clothes that may be in the closet. open, ‘Magaz ine. duaty appearanc: and’ sald “Simply @ bad case of ingrowing dust.” “But I always keep it in the closet with the door tight shut,” objected my brush it thoroughly Particle of dust each ft up without a dress cov: impossible to keep a velvet or corduroy tion in the ordinary closet or wardrobe, which is constantly opened, unless you cover it so that the dust can't reach “Buy two yards and one-half of a Pretty silkoline or Mght-weight tonne. out from the fold a narrow strip about opening very much like the neck of dress. y color, Or you can trim it with Copyrighi, 1914, by The Presn Publishing Co, (The New York Krening EAR now the Litany of a Daughter of Babylon, which H right hopefully: O Lord deliver me from the sorrews and affilctions of the year Nineteen-fourteen and the terrors of modern Babylon. From fat men who tango and fat women who “trot,” From old men who flirt with babes and young men who know not HOW to flirt. From women who have no faith and men who cannot be faithful. From men who take themselves seriously and women who take MEN seriously. From matrons who carry little poodle dogs upon their shopping hay and debutantes who carry cigarette cases and wear shadow-lace veils. From the peroxide Goddess of the millinery department, who will place an early spring nightmare upon mine head and exclaim “How be-e- eutiful!" oh, spare me! For however simple | may appear I am yet sane. : From the amateur flirt deliver me For 1 om weary of running @ © , Freshman Class. : | Yea, 1 am TIRED of kindergartening. SANE “ ORDINARY. CITIZEN’ From the man who feedeth me stale compliments and offereth me time- worn flattery in allopathic doses; likewise from the frank friend who offead- eth my soul with sugared truths, oh, set me free. For (am NO’ an ostrich, and 1 cannot swallow them. From the maa who confineth all his tenderness to telephone calls aad post-cards, but NEVER writeth an honest 'ove-letter, good Lord deliver me. For { cannot abide to be put upon a sentimental “diet.” From the man who offereth me platonic affection, which is love without kisses; and from him that offereth me plutonic affection, which is kisses without love, oh, spare me. From a reputation for “BRAINS,” I beseech Thee, deliver me. For in the eyes of men, peradventure, NO reputation at all woud, Aad Greater blessing. From the man who looketh upon every married woman asa amusement and upon every unmarried woman as a positive menace; dameels who pursue men and men who pursue chorus girls; from bachelors who never go home and married men who never stay home; from tango teas, bridge-whis: and moving pictures; from grand opera, futurists and near-widows; from all people who go about boasting of their appendicitis; operations and will not hearken when I tell of MINE; from death ben ;a TAXICAB! From these, and all the terrors of life in a Great City, gh, Providence, deliver me, that I may pass safely through anothe® year of grace in the |land of skimmed milk and artificial honey, of cold storage eggs and cold storage hearts, which Is galled it an LL Selah! Anecdotes of the Old-Time Actors ws By Edw. Le Roy Rice. “Monarchs of Minstrelsy, from Daddy Rice to Date,” ote, ANYOU BEATIT! Author o; Copyright, 1914, by The Mress t'blishing Co, (The New York Kvening World), What He Ordered. sald the s'nger, organization of todon Minstrels in 1878 w t event in theatricals, 1 “Forty! Count ‘em! Forty!" was a byword for many years. It was the custom at that time for ‘Coftee."" Naverly" val looking up. a| The walter didn't understand, withous repeated Harley tn his high ! iF Wt plain to the kn'ght of (1) ti t t the companies to pay tie hotel bills of | the napkin. p me es the performers as well us thelr railroad | “Order, plea: Go reared fares. A few days before they were to| “Coffee, —— —~ you! Coffee!'” And the walter brought him coffee. “I Can Never Love Thee.’” open in Philadelphia for their initial appearance in that city the “Colonel” =m Clarence Cullen: a Preee called the boys together and impres- HE late Fanny Davenport tie! Navi Yor 'Ereaing Werte °°" alvely told thom that when they ar- I played Pittaburem nosy is (cn he ‘On tt the Stuff” is sim- rived in the Quaker City they were fact, she played it several going to stop at the Continental Hotel, at that time one of the telries of the country. “And, boys." continued Mr. Haverly, “I want you to be as careful and co rect In your manner and speech as possibly can. I know you will credit to yourselves as well as me.’ They sald that they would, Mond they opened. All went well. Tuesday morning at breakfast the cork boys | were deeply immersed in the papers, looking up the “notices” good they were. George Harley, whose wonderful £ tto volce was for many years a fea- of minstrel entertainments, was at the table, In addit’on there were Mr. Die Enough—it's tho Staying Off that Samples o1 ‘Sand!" times, but it was on this particular occasion that the following little anecdotelet occurred: A certain clerk in a certain ‘hotel {had an evening off and he to spend it by paying homage to the great tragic actress. THe wi band. some chap and as he started for the theatre many feminine heads fourd occasion to look bis way. Before arriving at the theatre, he made several calls fit ta see HOW] Hiaces. where liquid refreshmen's were served, nor did he leave them until he had had hi Whi is dignifidd and—meliow. Ashe lieving himself of his overcoat iss Davenport was having a scene , | with the villain ai famous hos. ready and I've had ik is the matter with it?’ When our Spirit- ual Motor begins to Bkip Explosions we've got to Do ‘ou I shook my he: pproving! The Good Reso- . | however, nd. nat may be. But you don’ Much Stock IN| e Taken Stock OF » Now, it Ie fine broadcloth frock in good condi- time looking at the a front, who immediately picked up bis hat and coat, left his seat and sorrowfully at the tragedienne, the company. near- ; sighted and was quite busy with his] paper when the waiter addressed him a Feather- a Dignity, yes—but t Fine Line of Demarcation betw: Soa dress cover was Certain Kind of Dignity and Dulness! | with: said Vell, that settles it.” — “Order, please.” left the theatre. We Figure that we're Entitled to Just | —————__——— as Many “Rights” as we can Get—but {t Keeps us Pretty Busy Disabusing our Minds of the Fool Idea that we're a| Victim of an Excessive Number of| “Wrongs!” cre- Fold it In the exact center and The Good Things of Life And Their Just Division By Sophie Irene Loeb . Copsright, 1914, by The raw Publishing O, (The New York Hrening Word), shifts inches long, which will leave an Somehow we alwaye Feel that @ Fel-; low is Drooling Self-8ympathy when he Alludes to himself as “His Own Worst; Enemy It looks pretty to bind this ing with narrow ribbon of some iny frill of narrow lace. This makes! —— 6 E believe in making twenty we can put on four thousand sOrene anf mould ve A Giggle doomn't Get Anywhere, but a) § W ‘thousand men prosperous|more men who are anxious ¢o werk.” But thexends should ha Godd Laugh Diapels the Oblique View! | and contented rather than| [I believe Henry Ford must. have bev —— follow the plan 9!| ummed it up something like this; ~_ -Analyais Is a Needful Exercise— | making a few | "I can only eat a certain number’ of feather stitched, #0 oF ese Pay Sige don't care to Listen to drivers in our es-| meals a day, I can ride fn only one a tee bind” | the Results of our Introspection! tablishment multi-|my motors at a time. In brief, % ing of the neck. — oe the cover, m i}! longtres."| enjoy only so much and no more, Why. hd can ‘be made In half an hour OF} 1. doean't Intrude very much in the These ard the|then, should I make a MINORIEE; ef of Folke who Really Face the) words of Henry | men rich at the expense of the MASGR- puit on your stretcher and suapend viene life! Ford, President of ITY? Why wait and leave a big for- } are on in patent stretchers or by the Ford Motor] tune after I am gone for a few to qiar- "ve observed that the Man Company, who be-|rel over? And why not give some of it Now, take your cover, slip the| Maybe yONve Outen ae Mete- lieves that too! to those who have helped me make the will beng down and ‘complet oric” haa Just hit the Farth with « many bosses are| fortune while I can be allve to see tuem ee ot ‘Thud! | bad for business, | all enjoy it?” jainet any other pis . 3 His company will| Mr, Ford Is not the only one who is° ‘That Phrase, “The Even Tenor of hie| HEF LOEB® cive tho sum of| beginning to think I!ke that. It im the an it keeps the| way,’ always Conjures before us the!ten mitiion dollars extra this year to| spirit of the times and it stalks | “Phe wmall wooden trousers stretchers, with a clip at each end, and that \can be bought for five cents and sometimes even less, are very convenient for “IL im truly pomsible to catch u cold | BAnsing up separate ekirte, which if made of expensive material, should also by kdseing," declares = famous phynl- | MAY* thelr covers. nd muse orld will last only 15,- the latest fad im/to the lawyers in the Harry. Thaw | worked in acquiring it. ° to find out what ‘Telegragn. Mr. “Wien is @ clagsic net a classic?’ jaske eta hhye to, toll the. gublie that It'ls |the | Water " Image of a Fellow who Never Heard of the Word “Ambition'’ “The Road to Glory Leads but to the Grave" is Highly Kapoo and. Mellifiu- ous—but If we Listened to it Over-Much we'd All Drop our Tools! “Chasing a Will-o'-the-Wiap" is called the Height of Foolery-<but we once Met a Millionaire who, when a Prespector, Stumbled upon a Marveilously Rich Lead of Surface Gold while he was Pur- quing ® Queer Looking Butterfly that had Croseed his Plodding Path! right in our midst. There will be more and more men of his calibre to realise this, employees, in addition to thelr wages. Just think how John Doe, a sweeper will feel when he gets his And, mark you, It is not mere benefl- 4 counts Ba day fF! cence, hut good bysiness. A That Is certainly some Pay | worker means a conscientious one. “Do you think @ sweeper at five dollars a sweeping! |juat for sweeping. The poor little woman on the east;day Is going to run a chance of losing aide who gets that same amount per! hia job? Not much! week for doing the same kind of «weep-| Unlike the new broom that sweeps he {ng will wonder Why things are so un-|clean, the older he gets the Carnegie te working hard: equally divided, Yet never mind, Ittlo | woman! There are better things com- ing your way, and emptoyers are get- ting better every minute, To-morrow always comes and brings with it more employers like this one, Also many ‘Unuewal innovations are chroni- this firm. Mr. Ford otates, pes ean hee day and three will sweep, And so it wilt ein ‘every department. Men wilt "wane? a continue to be hired, not ‘a; such establishments, Fifleleney A Lot of the Bunch who have not “Public Ledger, When the pub- | ostentatiouaty Clambered.on Beard | other in a