The evening world. Newspaper, January 22, 1914, Page 20

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. World. . 1s" SSTABLISHED BY JOSWPH PULITZER, team, aie rooted PAAR dre, ening! 1 or One Year.. Daily Bxcept Sansay, & Lg i, Press i Company, Nov. 53 te w York, atdent., 63, Parts Row. Row, fecretary, @ Park Row. . freagurer, 62 York an Second-clase Matt titer, Continent and ‘or England and tl All Countrien in the International Postal Union. ey ne Month ‘ VOLUME Bhewsees ings Tuesday night. to have done the shooting. The-same night twelve good mi case of “Dopey Benny,” accredited Evidence offered yesterday in t strikers had barely enough to cat, to: pay the gunmen of th , Still another gang figured in | tenced to from eight to sixjeen year! and robbing an east side restaurant. It's a rare‘day when New York ¢ of, prowlers.and ruftians for whom ro wool’s work. ~ Can anybody doubt thai the P. biggest jobs in the history of the De; Let the President prono' it = ~OF COURSE THEY veeking licenses. ‘+ Whe Detroit marriage license cle: fiseovered the answer te the quest , In-that direction Mr. Ford | /* + man's notions of his-own value a reg natural beginning. If.we take a furtive luok at that when there hereabouts take the woman's a' Z One reason may be that Ame te’ men for protection save when the lige to join arme comes oftenest fron te “take” than to “be taken.” One thing is obvious: If there i te to » the woman's privilege to do hogs. , And there again—American Keiser’s siandani of arm ctiqueite blame. She won't let us be mk in, , ~~ CRIME CLUBS. | GIVE POINT to Police C y" hold proprietors of gang resorts accountable for the ruff they harbor, the Bowery pulled off one of its typical kill- ‘An ex-convict just home from EF) oo a) ine ealoon known as the “Tub of Blood. & a fight, @ man shot and killed. Prominent in the fray were a new ae ‘ “Qyp the Blood” and a member of the “Zump” gang who is thought to their homes, each under the protection of a police officer, amid howls of rage from a crowd of toughs gathered in a coug corridor. ‘Phe twelve were the jury which brought in a’ verdict of guilty in the beats his mame, charged with assaulting a police officer. chauffeurs went to:show that while the wives and children of the “Ownell Maddler” gang. ‘Abie’ Roth, head of the “Little Abie” band of guerrillas, was sen- ately needs to have done and done thoroughly? . — +4 ---—___ 6-4 - — GET MARRIED. | Hey) Ff HATEVER some people th os W the Ford puree-filling policy, nobody will be in the least sur- | es prised to hear that since the wage increase was announced seventy-five workmen have already got married and others are daily young men nowadays refuse to get married. have right-minded young men been doing for generations directly »they'got a raise ‘that looked good enough to support a home? » ‘The danger of a scheme like Mr. Ford’s is in over-accelerating wud@eriness his confidence in the future. Can these men make the most of their good fortune without indulging themselves to the extent of heavy overdraughts on what it may seem to promise? ‘That is ‘ what remains.to be discovered, ‘Ihe rush for marriage licenses is ) |. Mr. Carnegie bravely moved for the movies and talked for . “the talkies, though warned that it is often fatal to obscurity, 4 $e —- :; ARM ETIQUETTE. WW" the German Kaiser, who is always a great atickler for | arm when walking and decrees that itBhall be the other @ay round, of course New York doesn't have to listen, apy taking of aris at all, five mep out of ten * ahorter's man helps her along quite as well by pAtling his arm under 2On the whole, therefore, if the American man is not up to the cour! ———— 0 z Business’ is doing the best thing it can do—letting it lommissioner McKay's effort to ‘a went looking for equealers Result—the usual taunts, | Imi: en and true had to be escorted leader of a notorious gang that he trial of fifteen atriking mail tie union had plenty of money | he news yesterday when “Litile| 4 in Sing Sing for “sticking up” Joésn’t hear of some new alliance | bbery and murder are the regular | ‘olive are up against one of the partment—a job the city desper- | unce It “parewgo-nell.” Don't ink &f the economic wisdom of | D rk thinks Mr. Ford has indirectly jon why so inany thousands of discovered nothing new: What nd in expanding with too great the correct thing, says it is unmanly to take a woman's, { Cause they fail to prepa | for livelihood or for | ates come out of women’ ourselves, however, we shall see 18 initia- y can’t do without it, n the is to be any leaning done, it ought it, But where the woman is the women don’t lean, American Woman is primarily to tly as we know how to be, (Be Che Reiter of Tho Bening World * aay clfarey| T apply to find out what <a day on record in the within the past M. a Senr'wen the Windsor Hotel burned? y “JAMES A, COLLINS. By Applying te sapreme Coort. Mertag Dither At Ths Brening World: “Mew -an 9 man'st..me be changed? H. J. a Botevanee. Z eeplain a mo many to deat and dumb | People as employees? Are they not, after all, the best and most conacien- tlous workers? H. B. v ‘To the Ralitor | Where could 1 ere for full par ticulare to free high school edu- cation, ac. T. Mo} | To the Kaitar of The Keaning W Here ts a simple probiem that 1 ish readera would solve, aa it in terest» me very much: "A yard four minutes on B in running 9,000 feet. Find the rate at which each runs, Pleage show briefly the sulution and it» op- eration, FP. A. 8. By: - sLacTnic innon. i 7 témiinine veg sy a new Bs ohieh tte an desis Laat EEE LE LOE LEE EO BLE LY UNCLE 8AM @TILL AWEAD, In thirty years British exports thw i} an women do not deign to cling | «tl un, and he finds it simpler) sect with the wot After viniting (1 n'a colleges—Va Bryn Mawr and Mount Holyoke—l am New York. | j bay Press, Very itte wonder that a pair The Evening World Daily Magazine. Thursdays. Janu Can You Beat It? OID You SEE IN THe PAPER “ry DEAR THAT THE NEW GOWNS ) 185, GOING To BE MORE DECOLLE TE THAN THEY | (Have Ever REEN Ing their life. ‘omen's weht are Inefficient women el ical wrecks, with a valuel useless information and a penchant fashions which leave them aa nearly nude as the law will allow “The average bill of fare alone xt the Copyright, chools is enough to drive fn ud to bonbons ‘Hits From Sharp Wits Two New York officials have iemested that thelr sale Under ordinary ditions @ commiasion would be in or- }der to inquire into their state of} ‘mind, conaldering that New York in| Columbia State ore Le New York head line, but tha way to report tho day's mu Columbia State, . ¢ 6 In the story of the kind the Seriptures female created he t H ington women say “female” is a gar word, It lacks masculinity,-~ con Telegraph. ‘ vised a silen Good! fect a silencer for the tomcat phonograph. New Orleans States . After a man remains in a bar for % hour he can talk fluently ople, expecially upon n) Hes which he knows, nothing. abou! five sul mident }admit thet he had th ‘clothes when he wan 1’ oe woman | Iways the health.--New Or ° that home where ,t! go gut to have @ a good time. t | inerensed 10) per cent,, pens els ere increased 20 per “Bachelors often remain bachelors; tray because women spendthrifts, many women students! wealthy pa for tho problems of] Known amt |. Gradu Hiram Maxim, the inventor, has de-; for a gasoline eng: w let him get buay and per-| Care of Themselves—and he Him |_——_——-- - tow IS pers passiBue? (Te i) , By Maurice Keiten Yorn Kveaing er | ey, . Keugros LOWER UNDER THE ARMS : . | Pps copra 4 Copritght, 1914, ty, The Prens Publuding Oo, (Tho New Yrs Hrening Wei, Widower’s Number. T> tenderest, most impressionable spot om earth io-the- yearling widow. Of course it 1 ler to marry a widower than a bachelor, A.sae@le has been through the fire and slaughter of one marriage bes-ne GRIER in him. { When a widow begins curling her hair again or a witewer worrying about his thinness on top Copié chuckles and gets out Ris and Satan emiles behind his hand. In the matrimonial market a seasoned bachelor ie just @ shep-worn remnant; a divorcee ts a cast-off, second-hand erticle; but a widewer.ipe, treasured heirloom, inherited only through death. y After his wedding day a man usually tucke all the flattering adjectives and tender nothings in ‘his vocabulary away in @ pigeon-hole and marks them, “Not to be opened until widowerhood.” Perhaps there may not be so much excitement in marrying a widower; but there’s a lot more comfort in getting something that another woman has broken to double harness than in lashing yourself to a bucking bronebe fresh from the wild. o- f AND M a DEEPER IN THE BACK. Just AS IF THE GOWN WAS FALLING OFF A man may forget all about how to make love during ten years. of j matrimony, but {t's wonderful how quickly he can brush up om the fine 4 points again atter he becomes a widower. > . No matter how unhappy a man may have been with bis first Wife Hi i f t nothing on earth will make him flatter her successor by acknowledging that she was not a combination of Circe, St. Cecilia and the Venus de Mile, ( i The girl who marries a widower may be a sort of “second edition,” 44 but the girl who marries a seasoned bachelor is apt to be a forty: ¥ edition. ‘ Some widowers are bereaved—others relieved. ‘ r ’ Romances of Models, & ‘s By Famous Artists: Copsright, 1914, by The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York Ereaing World), C. C. PHILLIPS AND THE GIRL OF MYSTERY. ‘ . Le ERAL yeafs accept the fees of a regular model. ‘began tr. | “For three and halt, days he Coles Phillips, }came to the studio, arri the arti. in Fe-| parting in ts closed mS ing the ro-|the end of that ti ease of one of Here for $10, ny jerk si 9 models, mie tnonthe later 1 met Dyed an called to the | T—> whens | had ust stones 4 Ker telephone and a|moons, He invited me to adant at the ave! ts y the y ure! | college life. be: comrade jonts be- ther vol- Ar con. jon the Coner | “Four Below Yesterday," say® a) 17 tne Good . Rent Spot, Ly is rather avoiied. training and teaching popula there doer anything but encourage the One of the fcremost principles in all these colleges in that of economy. The college girl who attempts to dress ex ntly or “show off m any sense wirl, In fact, it does not “go” tn I found alao that the girls who were Pagans their way through school were * varloua little social nd, in fact, girls of ents are practically un- their wealth, And thotr are often \surprised to find “What Kind ‘al Wife?” HE answer to “What is a bach-| confident I clor?"* aummed by a noted author-| ther ity before the National Confey-!| spendthrift, ence on Race Bene-| fit, 1 as follows: feminine voice)the home of the 1's, whose that I had never heard before asked |lovely daughters he wanted mete Fees eens aroma —- ——=<=2. | me if I would like as a model a tall,/meet. The night of the [et T want beautiful blond, Gibsonesque girl. upto the L.'s and was “Ot course kanike her,’ Rowers: mae to ts dainty Deudaer toi twos and then the unknown voice said: ‘If|my hat and coat. The first tl )) By Sophie Ireme Loch § [ond nen ee eet ot honor not tolemaght aie She on tie oil ee eat fn SEES La jtry to find out who she is she will/of my drawings for which the” we for you.’ unknown had posed. Framed it to-day, with ite sewing and domestic,“ promised not to pry into the in«|wan my check. for $10.80. Simplicity {4 the keynote in all higher science classes and all the studied econ-4 cognito of my mysterious medel, and |" “ understood then why my. Gal- PS dag a (8B ior Kveotty education, It is a statistical fact that! omies thereof, rarely develops into the| set @ day for her firat o {ance at the bank persisted in’ being girl of hign sehools and colleges| spendthrift variety. An the clock struck ‘the uhgad of my, check book, liy show the best percentage in the} When {1 jour there was a ring on in “Here ut last was a clue to omy Pecacp ipiepsliolypheg el te talalgtad yd aks HIN boas esate oy gen Py is Fla stately footman Iumbered up the| mysterious model, When my name three dingy flights of steps to my|was announced Miss Lydia L. bd omi For they approach prob-| the beat of " studio at the top of the how Miss Brown) welcom lems of the home with the pirit rying over his hey a woenan' ‘. fur | bes 3 jone re aed t they go into the details and analy- wrap. He announ is of school problems, ‘Their minds ‘age xirl his name for | by Which namie 1 was to call the fair have been taught to make comparisons/ fear she Is a spendthrift, Mark the, unknown. having tea,’ and judge for themselves. Aifference in this example of the grad-|, “The beautiful lady and I sat be- nd Fred dared. nie for ‘The spendthrift woman is usually the| uating dress spirit from those good old | £ the pictures, pound box of one who has little or nothing to do in] daya in grandmother's time when ull life and in suddenly given opportunity } to spend money. But the averai who attends even the public # was waved up to be spent on that one} eventful day, it ‘The more educated a woman becomes made {t a buniness arrange- | who p the 8]MPLER her # and the more nd she finally consented to | Lydi: air! ool of Hand of gives lend. try te Crunch your) Knuckles into} Pulp! Hankering Genevality ete Facts! it's Some of ue who haven't Yet Con-/ quered tho Bee Resolution ah a Sure-Enough Sian i to Ko Hunting for Lionst| | ve Dine | covered that Lite ian't a Glittering | we Be- {that you're Trying not to Break It! Mess Up th yul- | Dust around sail | | We Know | First Drink and | Contes mm Years to} lery and Dex! room upon, Mr. Taft seater aula have dared to topic Fate Expends her Greatest Feroclty) Boye don't wait watil it Comes to, She's not a prig~she's just u nice! hat ls part of hiv plan =H al © oom ine an who Retuten to Pace te) myers 10" gin. ; and to ‘wait 'rovnd the country At she ration's horizon ¥ scan ane | | og. ‘Bix months agg a the gait of the Average Man ruhastn {ovine Averane cL ae ite of = Just aa Well to Remember that wives you a on young man whom | have kno for a f Ma Al there would not be es oine time asked permission to cail Who's he, Profound Maxim, vermhoot the Mark ee" by is ity Bi than to king Up the Man who Made that and the Drup vat it vonatrate, | y Personal M jon, the Truth of Itt ‘ake Cave of the will Take grankly ‘Thirty | the Sun were nol Somewhere! of If you Kn a Few Hun ‘There ts something the matter with Can Make « Man you'd B iidren must cumulags the Bones eo right now? The Taciturn Man: may not b¢ sot If Allof us see Ds Before we Leaded |}, Playmate, ew bow Righs \lred Doilara | Se eee a Optimettes By Clarence L. Cullen 1914 by The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Rrening Wold), the Grip tt! ine Top! | Keep in Tune! “ ” * months 4 wih oF | from the centre slide to those — The “Popular” Girl, travelling and 7 : and the fastening at the @ Buck len't the Way to HAT sort|the season, bar side set In rhinestones, of girl is now @ part of Jet which in now most pop- ume, and home| is mort effective upon a black eregnd \ 4in to Concentrate | | any Shadows if happy she is, making the ends mect acai to justify the means. On the other hand, the learned authority might attribute to the bachelor, his willihgness to re- main so because of his unwillingness to shoulder responsibility. OW is a good time to Invest isfy Jet, pearls or rhinestones. One seem N th arate akirt, which h id & fancy slide, set in rhinestones, Again become popular through! with « pendant ending in a pear-shaped the vogue of fancy coats, Aw it will pearl, fastened at the front of the gel+ continue fashionable for some time it| lar. A dainty one wax made up ot im well to take udvantage of the prea-| black maline, overlaid with whitevee+ ent wreatly reduced prices, ‘TheX are} ine, upon which were placed hve winter models, to be mure, but will give] slides set in pearls and rhinéstensa, excellent service for the coming three} Strings of pearl Leads formed ft Trouble-Dodger hia Place is Close to Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers All that the Conductor of th: Orches- tra of (hia Orb requires is Uiat you ular socially? 1 bellevo it the girl with the! shopx, ‘There are pretty greatest fund of! ornamented In cut steol, J human sympathy.| stones, light satins and crepe de chin 1 know the pretty| for evening wear and many noveltivs | girl is frequently! for drei neral occas: ot widely popu-! shop is mi ot thera | Ja: even with! in the Scotch plaids u | tne tridi nen, Nor is the} 2 girl whose sharp) ti:at falls in ends st the s'¢ INT wit is so apt to Voy collars are again tn | turn to unkind and unfair criticism, | and something new in this ‘ine fe whose father hae the | those of biacis muiine oruame.ied with | and undveakavie, of maline, and if slides of the gtieten- is t of theme dress acce! ing Diack Jet ave used with strande‘et black Jet beads, as just described, « pretty dog collar in the result, Jae slides and ornaments in all alsen ape n Aa inrge variety of designs are sem in the shops, er for the popular upstage= and Medici collars is @ melee can now be obtained orm of a narrow tape to which 1 favor, | attached five fine wire-like uprights 4 ® composition that Is perfectly Remember, when you Begin to Brood | over your Iecord, that a Famous Hig! has Bucceeded in Rehabilitating | peror Trying to Whitewash > We Blame |t on ‘Destiny # what we Real ! The “Ever-Victorious Army” is Re-| cruited from the Ranks of the Self) Conquerors! ar money carry off the palm of| — —- —— Stn ie: - F 0 ity. — You can Always Depend Upon Pro. | P9pular! Pee IH who te best liked by other| vastinution to Pass Another Dividend! | giris und alav by mon is she who hor- | The Ubiquitous Cuss! ' — |self cultivates warm and hearty lik- | By Eugene Geary. ” A Man we Know who, through this! ings. eae i sil Frags f we tally Copyright, i014, ty The Prem Publieving Co, (The New York Erening Worl, oliday on, oe sort of Ko me, but she in equally | : Hinliany Reesoe: Anan feady to work for the happiness of H, the Average Man's a ubiqul-|The pomiiclat too drags him in by te . t . She is the sort of girl to \( ) ous Css, : eels Permitting his Wife to Walk (ie Caen’ persone , muro of | He is popular too with the}! Whenever he's in a tight places. In her Winter-Before-Laat iat! | tolerant. comprehenst et she hee ob: He says ‘mid the glamor that over | = ‘her own fdeals, Perhaps she | y particular fuss, him mtenin: | Fight with your Back to the Wall if busy living up to them that s: | Rut can always be found on the job.| 1m not stating my side of the uso; ttle time or opportunity to censor) Ais knowledae is wide and conyinc- ini ides, 4 broader and more comprehensible [vou Muse and Can—but the Foxy ie what iy he, whofe, afe!ia" lat you Away! on me, He has taken me out a good! sa 4 ty vain a deel, but recentl> he informed m : that’ he could not come to see me ck doesn't mind Propping In. with: h he hoped we shoui have W i : tion--bur hea a sights Maaihe, (ROGER bat i ni he hat would wimpy, ssuaze yeu and nd to Rest your Entire shoul Weight Aguinat! through the land yp » he's enjoying ra opti (ee xt Nvaln njoying, afay oon hen the speaker concludes ina i# verfectly well ¢: neaen Ls vente 8 Dae ou Angl bo. In tho heated poltthen ‘Then imagine, only you can, J Heershaba trope ‘The worth of that quite Indiapensa there'd ve Fea Saang Sear £\ doen a0. spe eet Whe Pee

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