The evening world. Newspaper, February 7, 1914, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

0a RETABLISHED HY JOSMPH PULITZER. Frees: updo dy the Press Pudtiening Company, Noa. 63 to i j th Kew. New York. LITZON, Prealdent, HAW, Trensyr ER, Jr, Ber Pubitened Dasiy 88 an f'ng) Tor AM Countries In the International Postal Unton. + $8.80) One Yor One Mon Peeve ee eeeereeeeeeees NO, 19,163 WE DO NOT FORGET. | 5 PEW YORK takes grim note of the gangster’s latest work: | i N A Brooklyn policeman, shot while grappling with a des- "9 perdte gunniav, died yesterday, and a fireman shot down} 4 while trying to catch the fleeing thug now lies in the hospital in a} > eriti¢al condition. + Patrolman Murtha's life was his final sacrifice to the brave fight | the police aré making against the toughest forces of lawlessness and | ctime that threaten the peace and safety of the city. | : “ye The, public i¢ ull too often forced to turn its eye upon dark | spots in the Police Department. But it does not forget that among . the police are hundreds of strong, brave men who are ready to face | jets anid knives in the course of ihe day's work, and who prove it | when the time coinve without fuss or hesitation. | The more it sees aud hears of the power and extent of the gang | oystemn the more the city is impressed. But with the certainty that | the pdlice foreé contains plenty of real men who stand up to their| ~ tty it is not appalied. | ‘The Interna) Revenue Collector siys that social clubs and even e6wing circles are liable to the income tax unless they are ‘eharttabdie or educational. Don't forget the bridge players. ‘They're the met uncharitadle lot we know. ete AN INFANT HEART-SNATCHER. HE foar-yebr-old-gir) whose charms broke up a boarding-house | atd ddueed three or four bachelors to lose their he even to the point of attempted kidnapping, is starting life like an ‘infant: Helen of Troy. ; ‘Wher the hard-working mother of the enchantress took her away > frPth ‘the. “respectable and refined surroundings” where the child | Bad teen. lodged nnti! the mother could. make a home for her, those - who hed fallen under the spell.of her constant presence beoame wild : rs affection. When tity could stand it no longét, they ob ail. in a' taxicab with bold designs to recover the beauteous one ao ~ rad “rh ¢, Het victimes are enid to include among others a “chef” and a ith @ reputation of being an “awful grouch.” In the gf a neighbor who knew: “She made the bunch lie down and Pall over... They'd lei hor walk on them if she wanted it.” *y Tle as, protty. & bit of romance es New York has heard for many Oday. « Bat it-shoiild make the city doubly‘ solicitous to find some to dlter the ead state of lonely bachelors who have no alternative # 0 lose their, hearta to other people's children, , Opre ie:a0 age ‘of progress and refinement. The elegant ,. Satglar now treats the tips of his fingers with acid to make them ab dmooth es glass. Finger prints are vulgar. oe : THE BIG SISTERS. thie vity was first made to realize the crime of herding child’ delinquents with hardened wrong-doere and common * eriminale it wisely established the Children’s Court. ‘Bat justice, even though it does its best to keep the child clear Hharmfil comtamination, cannot go on and do the work of sympathy ’ ing ftiendehip and watchful care to bear on individual cases after iy Nave papsed:through its hands, _ | That 'te'Where the Big Brothers siepped in to meet the erring , Court+to give him a friend when he moat needs one to atudy hia difficulties and sect him straight. . A little more than three years ago the Big Sisters arrived on the to: make friends with wayward girls, ‘l'o-day there are one ‘and six Bis iw bdren’s Court.© Who they are and what they do, as described in the Sunday World Migaiine to-morrow, may surprise some people who thiok that all New York society women fritter away their time frivolity. , ; +——__—. ; 7" rabies miseranda ducis!” sang the Roman poet— _ Meantag: ‘The: boss is bughouse! been in exiat- It's well enough | ho haa never hud wrap! . 1 know positively that sume of the broker ‘ay: A, running 9,000 760 teet on B, and in one ara ware. (or 10 fost 16 or feet), Hae fter running 8,006 —- 300 = up-to-date telegraphin, that the com- jal men have to jo nowada: w. rwiset To the E@iior of Tie Kreming World: 1 wish some doctor would tell read- - If this winter ;.|(warn and sunny ai Rol aleory.| ihe Wenid: ems e healthful hy 3 J MM i for & man yeiting jnot ee he Aides not as good u winter health Teer 88 feet per minnie, man wi N ” yan tee. City North Carolin the license ' To the Edivor of The Evening 9 letter, 1am about eighteen years oid. The Eventng World Da | Kindness, It cannot go into causes, follow up clues and seek to} i with a representative always on hand in the | f° men could not commence to do the | his son for wanting to y home from | achool. ae SuBWwAY NOY DE LUXE iJ (I ue | i oe CRUSH TRAFFIC IN STRAPS A THRILLING SEATLESS Straight From The Shoulder Succses Take to Yount «Men COT tsa ex York ivenins Words) °° Health. HERE is an old saying: “A sick horse draws @ péor load.” We might add to this that he does not get very far on the road, either. Most young men don’t have to worry very much over good health— thay have it. It ie the usual inheri- tance of youth. They smile at the load, prance the road and take pal splendid young bodies for It te only when the in to etale” that they begin tend ‘Boe ne At the National Portratt hey ab.the‘ctitical inomont when he is brought sullen or bewildered | gras ber the days when they were rolling briskly along without an ache or that “tired 5 fuel, Don't burn it wat i It'e easier to avoid the ‘cennes and the careless ne. wlect which tear it down than it i to build ft up Sy ity You need your full vigor of mind and body to euocessfully draw your loi : the great highway of busi- ‘ uu it the need the endurance to hills, You need the clear and the body in tune to your onw tread rhythmic. Your mind is the driver, it the body is the horse, And the horse that needs the whip of tonics and the spur of druge-to keep him going is @ sorry nag for the business wagon. Save your good bealth now, Later it will gave you, By Evelgn Hamilton Ede of England man to whom bis | cg; ‘dear Morland—poor fellow.” and grandson of two able and gifted paint ‘Hie From Sharp Wits Copyright, 1914, by The Prone Publlahing ¢ HE roads that lead to the Great White Way Are many and broad and bright, They ure lit by the hopes of the eager ‘The man who ducks his duties in the matter of taking his wife to social 9 is usually the same chap who down his newspaper to lick day ‘i i And the dreams of the’ pulsing night. At the journey’s end is the glittering goal Of Laughter and Life and Song, But the price of the trip is a human in January at 10 qi be some mistake, as it has been our ob- servation that they are usually at thelr at an age ranging from seven to thirteen for a period of about wo weeks prior to the 26th of De- cember.—Philadelphia Inquirer, * 4 A new we hi renner ie thet, the lancers do not @ feet higher than three inches, Chi fentnins dancers could a Colum ja States, Don't worry if the temperature drops to sero again. That is nothing.—Mtl- foul If the traveller be not strong. Bi that beat on the Great ike yours and min jp to a measure biithe and am thinking of joining the navy. there a chance to learn a trad the navy, readers? How do they use & fellow when he joins? How te the . — 1 Robnagll who have t +} vise me trisay. has Yeo, Yo the Bahar of The Evening World: Boss ean yer ever skip Che. vane =“ efense of “Tel- Writes less op- Tu Little Bird was sitting on a limb which stuck out over the river when he saw, a Hippo- potamus dive into the water, “My goodness: that | ‘It must be wonderful to be big like Bech Rama ab ret waukee Benti: <r It's all right to love one's neighbor as one's eal, Provided she is unmar- wi red, ° The ‘too Pages anally he ‘Wand the Little|i born an artist. The roads Copyright, 1914, by The Pree Publishing Oo, (The New York Broutng World) Mr. Hippo, air for me whi Gallery, London, cess at seventeen, me the diminuendo of his career, contemporaries .always referred as due to his wild dissipation, and at Son ast he died in a debtor's most eretanes one His pictures we he may be said to have been own land. Hee Roweiy teens: ty co, (The New York Brening World), ‘When atirred by the magic wine, of rison in a INTERIOR OF A STABLE, by George Morland—1763-1804. He was but fifteen 118 is the best loved picture of |Ye#"# of age when he first exhibited at the Royal Academy and was a one of the best loved painters Before thirty The Weird of the Great White Way They beat full high when the blood yout Runs galloping through the veins; rutl Ever age takes up the reins. ite Way— Ah! whither, who can tell? The march to the dancer’ jut run straight, These streets of the aftermath, DREN—BY FARMER SMITH have very, 5%, “ant hey store eno! Alr ie very im ater. portant You cannot live without know. he maid to hit ft. Joven for three minutes. But the price is hours of pain and lead from the Great After the dance of the feet astray, knell. they wide, or run they The Price that’s paid at the outer| wate Is the price of the spirit’s wrath. E. W, ~~ JUNGLE TALES FOR CHIL The Tang By Sophie Irene Loeb nen | "Toorag wate a © ONDON—Here, the city where everything new 1s looked upon with suspicion, the tango is the i There's no getting away thing. ; from it. On ds drop) play tunes, Cri clams, at a dime a dance, here man: of the ehurcbes are decrying whole business, sayin “All dances are dangerous, but tango is the moat daring of all. we returning paganism and shameleseness?' Notwithstandin: cally all hours of the day and ni In all of which one truth is cei more these dances than ever before. See case with all classes. ne the same sort of sensation that waist and shoulders and w that the si was introduced Planted the othe! our great rha in children will be amazed that an: was ever shocked by the sedate graceful tango. In the final whethe! one thing is certain: that where ercise without evil, there should be no raphrase, is “On with replied jot joy be unrefined!” de extremiste may be dealt with accord- fh | ingly. etay under the it, you it | faddiste. in St mat had bly Kings “if you acre Cr etre Anata. Of the Tango sides opinions as } to ite contin- | ¢¢pT appears,” remarked the head |getting hold of the party machinery uance resound, I polisher, “to have been the| extremely remote. How dear old! firat legislative job of former ‘As for the Progressive hag Broa ould Gov, Sulzer to|!* ® one-man organization, dway wi st the Colonel is on the job the Pro- smile could it} put Theodore are » In his absence hear the English | Roosevelt ia poy walk around in circles, each es | nomination for| leader keeping a wary and suspicious ite b's while it| our tango like the brook, go on forevel ‘While our women's organisations in | New York arrange dances to teach working girls how to tango or srissiy. ea. everywhere there are more and more dancers anzious to trip the light fantastic at practi- ple have learned to dance favorably inclined critic point out the fact that when the walts w: Introduced a century ago it created ours—much faster and in two-time. The partners held each other round rated rapidly, ‘like cockchafere on u gin” It was not until half a centu Viennese wal 4 quickifesup- -grand- y one analysis, however, it or wrong, nd pleasure are intended, hae to the dance by fair-minded ble is the activity whore motto, ily Magazine, Saturday, February Copright, 1914, by The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Hrening World), As to the High Cost of Kissing. 66 HO'D be a rich man, anyway?” exclaimed the Bachelor, laying W down his newspaper. “Here's a millionaire being sued by a girl for $500,000 for breach of promise. Half a million! Think of itt What a price to pay for a kiss!” (|. “That isn’t the price of a kiss.” returned the Sentimentalist, turning from her easel and commencing to clean her brushes with Tung, deft white “It's the price of escape—of « change of heart. And it's exceed- “Cheap!” protested the Bachelor. ‘The Sentimentalist nodded. | “Wouldn't you consider it worth half a million dollars to ‘wake up’ in ; time to es marrying the wrong woman?" she inquired as she latd her brushes in a neat off her painting apron it would certainly wake me up!" agreed the Bachelor with a shudder, “The new tariff laws don’t seem to have affected the high cost of kissing, do they? It's becoming more expensive and dangerous every day to make love to a pretty girl. fot @ bit more dangerous or expensive than it was when the ancient Greeks risked being turned into stone for a kiss from the Medusa,” declared the Sentimentalists gazing dreamily into the fire. “Nor than it was when the mediaeval sailors risked their lives for a kiss from the Lorelei; nor than it was when Antony paid with his honor and his life for a kiss from Cleopatra. Men always have and always wilf pay heavily for a kiss—from the wrong woman, King Manuel, who flung away a kingdom for a vaudeville dancer, and the echool master who lost his job for kissing a ecrubwoman only a week ago, are brothers under the skin when it comes to a girl in the case. A kiss has always been the costliest thing in the world and the high cost of ‘loving’ has been proverbial since the year one; yet men are always as- tonished when the bill comes in.” eee] 66 ES,” sighed the Bachelor, thoughtfully, “you can't get something for Y nothing im thie world, and if a chap doesn't pay for loving with money or matrimony he pays for it with his appetite and his sleep | and his common sense and his tllusions—and sometimes his conscience. “Oh, always with his conscience,” the Sentimentalist assured him. “Be- cause, if you will observe, it has always been a kiss from the wrong woman —the woman he didn't love or shouldn't love—that has been the | because he {a always looking for a bargain—and from the plague, for fear he may marry her; and, of course, he always runs right into the arms of some woman whom he doesn't take seriously.” “Something like dodging an automobile and running into a street car,” suggested the Bachelor with a smile. “Exactly! . “Now, if only a man would keep his heart and his sentiments and his ..isses unti! he meets the right woman— Just as « girl keeps hers until she meets the right man”—— “Great heaveng!” broke in the Bachélor. “Would you make a lot kissed Dowles’ of us? The right girl wouldnt have that kind tender young thing when he did meet her. He'd have to ‘wear court-plaster patches all over his reputation, fest to were a few spots on it, if he wanted to interest her. care—wouldn’t waste a minute of me if you The Sentimentalist smiled. & a lot of nice men in the world who have their sentiment away lightly and kiesing girle—just to “There ANH,” replied the Bachelor never known the bitterness of loving the ecstatic happiness of loving the right lwho has never staked his heart aud soul on has missed half the excitement tn life. “No man ts really wiee who has never @ fool of girl. Win or lose, it's better to have kissed and paid the cost than never to have kissed at all!” “But I've noticed,” remarked the Sentimentalist with a wry little mouc, “that they all struggle like mad to escape the bill when {t comes in!” “Not al murmured the Bachelor, thoughtfully, gasing into the fire. “That's the only kind you hear abuut. When a chap pays the bill without murmuring, whether he pays it in matrimony or money or lifelong regret, tt doesn't get into the newspapers. If it did—well, the newspapers would have to get out an extra edition every half hour!” The Week’s Wash By Martin Green 4 all Copyright, 1914, by The Pram Publidhing Co, (The Mew York Brening World), ore oe bod other, Ae great many far- poltts- clans who bave been in the e Ba So Rental aeaas 4 . mi clared the [tun |for President in 1916, It would be dry man, bad politics for him to go ht cold. W! into the so foolish a8} fig! ‘hat Prent arene: ae some _ politicians | f<gwing New York ato the Preerea, ive column wit Sed bolts ae heat ES ti prophecy,” de- the the Are its profess to be- Meve. It is well to reflect that the versatile Col. Roosevelt is now far, far from our midst, shooting things and gathering bugs and plants in the wildernesses of South America. “Do we remember the last time the Colonel went away from here and from oa plunged into the jungle? Wedo. We that cop, oms- also remember what a greeting be Mwthe, received when he got home and how, tee rf shortly after his arrival from Africa, he was busily engaged in turning the Republican party of the nation inside out. “When he gets back this time he won't have to turn the Republic. party of the State inside out. That function has already been performed by the Republican leaders. He will find a situation in both the old parties as satisfactory to him and his plans an if he had fashioned it bimself. “The old time Republicans are lin- ing up to prevent the nomination of District-Attorney Charles 8. Whit- man for Governor. The Whitman Republicans are resourceful and will atick to Mr. Whitman as long as he keeps himself at his present high level of popular favor. The Demo- |: cratic party the National the laundry man, “comes in iMustrate that a police not be ranked with otvit Ployees who keep books school or perform any sort duties for eight hours a half holiday on Saturdays. Vocates of the bill, taking the of court review of police from the department, insist Policeman is no more entftled te right than @ stenographer. “Getting killed by lawbreakers ts Part of the duty of policemen. Alter- hate day and night work in all sorts of weather is part of the du policemen. Resisting the con! demands of men who would pro@t bribery {8 part of the duty of polies- men. Unoonsciously getting the oat of one of their numerous superiors “y of the duty of policemen, Quick, lance on thelr ow: duty of : the i e, ay: allt and ob- to the diligently to destroy the Thomas an and other Wall yy in- 66y SEE," said the bead polisher, I “that Norman Hapgood, the editor, swore on the witness stand in the Federal Court that he bas read 238 nasty books.” :

Other pages from this issue: