The evening world. Newspaper, February 26, 1914, Page 16

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SS . | ESTABLISHED BY J Peblished y Except § inday by the Prowse Publishing Company, “agit ar ark Row. New York. Noa, 68 0 York aw Second-Clase Matter, STF or England and Continent e@@ All Countries in Meador Postal a. « 0098 a bY HE Aidermen’s achievement in divesting themselves, by a vote be T of 40 to 1, of the old petty privilege which put licenes for 4 newspaper, fruii, flower stands and the like into the hands of | the Alderman of the district means more than the measure itself. ‘J It means that a new spirit of unity and determination is ani- j Mating the majority of the Board, and that even the minority would | father go on record as having voted for a sensible measure, eure to | pass anyway, than furnish an old-time exhfbition of Aldermanic pig- headedness, x One Alderman only, who chose to be a minority all by himeelf, | "4 Stuck to the traditions, voting against the measure because “he did | mot want Alderman Curran, the Fusion thajority leader, to get the eredit of it.” : It is greatly to be regrotted that the Board did not pase the pro- a ordinance making the one-day-in-jail sentence imposed on vio- of (Re speed law include at least a night. The short afier oon "ad a in the jai! corridor—which is what the present minimura ) % ‘penalty amounts to—is a joke. ‘ Nevertheless the city is only too glad to note the evidence of | @fowing responsibility and self-respect in the Board. When Aldermen renounce questionable privileges of their own | @ccord, and without a snarl, the public has hopes of them. If they | % 5 @ on passing sensible measures over minorities of one, intelligent | @itizons will cease to talk of abolishing the Beara watch for it fo become a credit to the municipal system. It refts with the Alder- PH PULITZER, | LET'S HAVE A COCKTAIL Bie ? | CAN'T, THE BUBBLES JARS BA FoR Hy IRHEUMATISM — 1 ONLY DRINK MINERAL WATER IT's BAD For MY LIVER, . i men therpsclves. f ———_-¢ e ‘The suffragists are looking for Adonises to put into their :. coming pageant. We take it handsome husbands have run short. | P NOT TO BE THOUGHT OF. PD) QT IS one thing to accord Charles Becker a new trial for the mur- | der of Rosenthal with the guarantee of fairness, the chence to ; prove himself innocent that is every man’s right. It is quite another thing to consider even the remotest possibility 8 Oharles Becker's return to the police force, with his back pay ©) thnded over to him and his formegstending restored. Whether Becker is directly responsible for the killing of Rosen- ‘thal or not, his name reeks of the graft-polluted “System,” of what- ‘eter corraption snd crookedness has been baid at the door of the ppetice. It is imposible for decent citizens to think of him es again @ member of the force. The cynics of the whole world would have just cause to eneer at Blow York if such a thing were to occur, _ “Give Becker a new trial for the killing of Rosenthal. But let | MA never hear, even though he be found innocent of that crime, that > this man, with his character, his methods and his associates, ie again | 6 wear a police uniform and become a trusted servant and guerdian » wh the city. If the present laws that govern the force can be interpreted | fe permit the reinstatement of Becker, then that fact is a stronger |. Qrgument for passing the Mayor's Police bills than thousand Col. Beothels’ — ‘When the inbabitants of @ town in Spain are disgruntied by a enowfall, we gather from an Evening Post correspondent in Too RICH freving, letures!” whim jarr. ing you look you let your resentable! nds won't come out? Look at them!” And when Master Jarr looked them Mrs. Jarr ra. Mrs. “Now you've got me all of a tremble after washing you and mak- Why did t chap) oo the dirt has got into the oskles and gave them a smart with the back of the bair dane ‘ou whop me you otter takes me LETS HAVE SONE LOBSTER A LA TANGO Thursday, February 26. 1 HAve Sone YourRstr. IT Gives NE IN DIGESTION tT'S BAD For My NERVES . IT KEEPS NE AWAKE DON'T LAUGH. IMEAN IT. BE AY WIFE. You NEED A PROTECTOR IN THIS Willie Jarr Is to “Now, just for that, you don't set | @ new dress for your birthday, and I had it picked out!” declared Mre. Jarr, “Dear me! I never saw such children! I almost wish adopt- ed twins or something! “Mra. Madig: who lives in the flat above Siavi has twins, Maw,” said Master J, roused to interest. “And they are red-headed and holier for m'lasses bread and fall down the steps, and their mother fights with at t ies, Maw!” he sniffied| Mrs.’ Slavipsky about it. Wouldja ‘that elime, the Mayor resigns and retires to the country until 196. Os. gnspingly. Wille wae willing to pay adopt ‘em, Maw? It ‘ud be lots o' = the sun has come out, melted the snew and brought back the wr WS, Yor wicaine Wortth Shead in pain for pleasures that |funl a oe numor scarcely ap es — : deas e emiles of the citizens. Then he cheerfully Hager bis duties, 66 ILL we go ta eee the mov- nao are going down town to the peal e eae, oie Mra dary, Be parte :of the = re net {Oe plcturge, maw Ty eaneG clothes!” replied his ‘mother, “And {you'll stop teasing your sister and always 00 frank. je Jerr, a Instead of being @ good boy and being | Making her cry, and if you'll be a ay Coased his walling from the effects of | gi, u've got me all upset and in feed little girl, Emma, mamma will r eee en being soaped and then bighly pol- | suc! tate that I won't be worth a ing you something nice—we'll go ith what womankind calls “a|PIn: down to the store and get you a new A GIANT INDUSTRY. ame mm lat me £0 and dit me a new wes ai ot cater eating directions with ” ‘This flaccid instrument of the|girl. ‘Willie ie a bad, bad boy, to|ertrude, as to what that light run- ’ \T baseball is one of the “principal purmuita” of the country | iictte is never ilipety by | ake my nice maame kel”, . ning, domentic = to say down the is vo news. But the barrels of money that only wait to| mate persons. But it can be and is| wit ny SMart BO Tee Oe Bogpsrons man called up for the $2.80 due him, , ‘be tapped for the greater glorification of the game begin to bestenish oven the insiders. : Along with the news that the Federal League is trying to per- Fuade Christy Mathewson to take over the management of the Brook- » Agm Club at 0 salary nearly as large as is paid to the heed of a first- ‘Glass corporstion—a ealary, es Matty himself ways, “bigger than I 3 “thought could be paid by a baseball club”—we are casually in- ‘te that @ syndicate put a man aboard a train for Cincinnati the fother night to offer @ cool million dollars for the Chicago Cubs. £ Nor can we overlook “Muggsy” McGraw, manager of the Giants, fording it in London and giving ch © | dor all the world like an Americar truet magnate. ig First thing we know baseball stock will he the newest darling | 44 of Wall street. > ig t Ps % Me —_—-+-—_ — -— ‘The Mayor of Atlantic City {s reported to have sald would love to see a Monte Carlo here.” Maybe he's got « “system.” fo pace. | B ere it Tiere fe, ibe mans! CS e artist. Which ta right? Ronert QO. THOMAS, Anewer to Ladder Problem. To the Waiter af Tie Krening Ward: How de> is a well in which « lad- ler when stood upright in the tre will protrude 2 feet and when leaned over aidewise to the wall will just oct Tee Erasing Wor come to the top, the width of the well (me that in eating a \dge | being 10 feet? My solution ie that the of rolled oate she i» eating| Well is 7% foet deep and the ladder is outs, B claims she is eating °% feet long, Tet * = depth of well, . Which is right? G.H.M, then * 4 2 length of ladder and ts B fe Right. b'fect in the base. ‘Rhoretore tf 3y2 pa ae | lore ( 2 64— > 3, this solves x 2+4% +4 on arsumen\ . ‘Ragar nice Dugroumhe Wrote Both the GAllor of The Evening World: Jet me know through your the name of the author of “The ; of Tarsen” and whether the of ‘Taraan of the HARRY D. LEHRER, Both Are Right | y interviews to the Britishers, je and (used constantly and satisfactorily by females of all ages. It's use, how- ever, upon the male only obtains when the male Is caught young and te held tight by its maternal parent. Master Willie Jarr having suffered and endured the tortures of the wash rag, Geomed he wan to have recom- pense in the delights of beholding at least a two-reel movie thriller—made in Italy, such as “The Vampires of Venice; or, The Doom of the Doges.” But it was not to be, alas! “No, you're not going to see the fort being a the little gin Uttle sister a shaking. Hits From Sharp Wits. ay muy be born free and equal, is the women who are bork on to any emergency.—Memphis| Commercial Appeal. . | ° Any one in @ small town that ts ‘ watching @ fo tory fireproof “sky- scraper” going up can tell you the |feanon for the present boom tn the | Steel business,-- Philadelphia Inquirer, ° e |The feminist who declares no wom- an became eminent by being a Hy dd housekeep evidently = mi j cheap notoriety. eee : Indiana Universi students have recorded themselves an being opposed to slat It is not known yet wheth- er this is a bona fide fess or & mere opposit Ade's senatorial boom. Plain Dealer, . or @ good mothe aukes eminence for ‘The average man thi At Ventee, wisdom of Solomon, | dertakes to display it his friends are | convinced that he im entitled to nev. | eral) more — think w Orleans | Btates | eee | we of three or four foolish notions a day ought to be enough for anybody to have—Toledo Copyright (The New York Evening Wark) By Evelyn Hamilton Eden. of in forms birthday, mamma's comfort!” replied ‘Mra. Jarr. But the birthday of mamma's com- rospect of the future, began to wail that whe wanted a new white dress and @ gold bracelet right then, and Mrs. Jarr had to turn from Willie to give INDUSTRY, by Paolo Veronese. 1914 by ‘The Press Publishing Go, interpretation through the brush. The day it was Guiehed there was Bo other kis- a picture marks a departure and what to say to him in case he was impudent on being informed Mrs, Jarr was out, the fond mother gave the little girl the button box, some old sash ribbon and her thimble and second best scissors that ulmost cut, to make doll clothes, and so sallied dred concept in painting in the world and so far as is now known n It struck the ite for Plus ire iw on vi draperies es js called to the figu but attention | followh ‘er |in farm work in Ireland on June 1, LIFE AFASAAAAAALAAABABABAABAAANAAABAAAAAAAS Have A New Suit of Clothes SSAAAAASASAAANAABAAAAAARKALAAAAAAAAR store that's just opened up, Maw,” sald the boy as they hastened to th subway. neers, maw is going to buy somepin, and Tzzy is goin’ to buy somepin and littl Becky is goin’ to buy somepin——" But Mrs. Jarr cut short the recital of the Slavinsky family's raid on the souvenirs by giving Master Willie jerk and telling him he had forgo’ ten to put a clean handkerchief tn his pocket in spite of all she had sald, and hurried him on. ¢ “But ain't you gonna go to the five and ten-cent store when it opens and get a-souveneer, maw? If you buy somepin for fi’ cents"”— “The only thing would interest me in the five and ten-cent store would be its ig & ready-made clothing t for you and your fathe: to get new suits at, for it’s just throwing away money to buy you good clothes!” declared Mrs. Jarr. “Now, please don’t loiter. And don't stop to talk hat Beppler boy. 1 don’t belie’ more than half- witted. * ‘And why didn’t you put on your rubbers, gpd let me tie your tle, and how did you get the cuffs of that clean shirt dirty? Oh, dear, was ever such a boy?" But in her heart she gloated over r. In her heart to her whim- Certainly there auch a pered question. NEVER was SUCH a boy, fine boy, such a good boy, such @ smart boy, as Willie Jarr—and when the neighbors saw him in the new suit she was going to buy him! And her heart sang a song of happiness and pride. —_—e—— First One-Cent Paper. HE firat one-cent morning paper in America was the New York Morning Post, which was found- ed in 1838 with¥ Dr. H. D. Shepard editor and Horace Greeley as print Prior to that by three years an eve: ning paper called The Cent, selling fo: that amount, had had a brief existence in Philadelphia. Greeley, who was born 103 years ago, started his career asa printer in Poultney, Vt., in 1836, Xn 1881 he arrived in New York with $10 in his pocket, but two years later he began business on his own account as printer of the Morning Pcst. is year Greeley, in parti with Jonas Winchester, established the New Yorker, of which Greeley was editor, In_ 1840 Greeley ,edited and published the Log Cabin, a campaign paper that gained the astounding cir- peutation of 80,000, ————— IRELAND'S FARMERS. ‘The 1,074,288 persons actively ag 1912, constituted 24 per a ecording te the 191 umber 810,603 were male the web of complicated toll is ‘held aloft, A curious thing ts that this robe has served costumers for gen. a model for women's eactige regbie” [ond the Mang Sede. WELL SOAKED WOOD. y Ie always soaked In er for "trom aix to elghteen months as soon ae It comes chiefly from Mauritius “They gonner g.ve guye-| Izzy Sluvinsky says, #0 his |) od cent, of the total pop- 914 ‘ = BA S HELEN ROWLAND: CHELO ite Coorright, 1014, by The Prose Publishing Co, (The New York roving World), I never wore a purple wig, I never hope to try it. But 1f I do I pray that you Will shoot me when I buy it! | T {s easier to love a husband than to like him; because you can love hist blindly, but you've got to like him with your eyes wide open. There would be a great many more “perfectly fascinating” men if they would only forget for a minute or two how perfectly fascinating they are. Every woman has a different notion of an ideal husband; but evéry | woman's ideal lover is the same impossible combination of saint and devil, 'brute and baby, hero and mollycoddle, that never is seen anywhere off the stage or outside the pages of a “best thriller.” | The qualities a man seeks in a bride no mpre resemble those he will | want in a wife than a cabaret rag-ditty resembles a lullaby, but two years | ahead is farther than any man can see when ho is looking into a pretty } sirl’s eyes. Somehow a girl always has more regard for the kind of lover who says a lot, éven though he doesn't mean it, than she has for the one who means a ‘tot and hasn’t the courage to say it. All the beautiful sentiments a girl may utter have less weight wih @ | man than the curve of her retrousse nose or a tantalising curl over her ear. Don’t fancy that a man yearns for your “lov~.” re a perfectly satisfying substitute—and a great Your flattery, your de interesting self-raised bread. In {tthe fer- ‘ments originally present or acquired fro. the alr produce the fermentation {which leavens it, To make it wi mk and cornmeal are mixed together |/:t0 @ stiff batter which ts left at blood seat Until the whole masa is sour—that is, until the ferments present have pro- duced fermentation throughout. Next s thick sponge te made of wheat flour and hot water in which a little salt has been dissowed, This sponge and the sour batter are thoroughly kneaded together And set In a warm place for several hours. The leavening action started in the batter spreads through the dough and produces a light, porous loaf, which many persons consider very palatable Guch @ bread is comparatively free from acidity, as the presence of th> salt hind- ers undesirable acid fermentation. Ordinarily a baker mixes his dough with water, and most of the data sum- maiized in this bulletin refer to such Bometimes, expecially in private milk ts used in the M1 of the water, Suc! in riving but makes an equally ight loaf, Milk bread contains a larger percentage of protelds and fats than nd is equally digestibl 1 means to be advocated, tm milk is @bundant. When water used it should, of course, be free from any dirt or contamination, Its hardness or soft- ness makes little difference in the qual- ity of the bread, though perhaps the softer water in to be preferred, Salt ts used in bread because it imparts a flavor without which bread is usually consid- ered insipid, and becausé tt exerts @ retarding influence on the diastase by which starch fm converted into sugar, and om other ferments, ‘When the flour is of good quality, the dough well prepared and the bread prop- erly baked, the loaf has certain definite charactertatics. Thus it shyild be well raised and have a thin, Minty crust, which 1s neither too dark in color nor too tough, but which cracks when brok- en, The crumb, ae the interior of the loaf {a caed, should be porous, elastic and of uniform texture, without large holes, and should have a good flavor and odor. ‘The methods of mixing dough are va- HE girls are now searching for T pretty linens to embroider for the coming showers to the Faster bride, consequently the art featuring many new ideas, Prominent among these are the Dresden china designs, which make up 80 daintily. These are luncheon sets, doilies and centrepieces, stamped and tinted in the Dresden colorings. The doilies are 10 and 16 cents each and the centers range in price from 60 centa to $2.50, The new delft embroidered articles are meeting with unusual favor, The designs are simple and work up most effectively. In the circular pieces there are dollies at 25 cents and centers at $1.50, A 40-inch luncheon cloth can be had for $2, while the 84-inch size is $4. Doilies in cut-out designs, known as the Riche! are new and at- tractive, Th in be had at 12 cents and instructions for working are given gratis, Tumbler sets, consisting of two carafe doilies and six tumbler dollies, stamped in neat designs, are 25 cents, and make @ most useful git, A pretty centerpiece gray Inon and worked In green coro- nation braid is handsome and the { stamped plece can be had at 25 cents, Another one in white linen Is $1 and most effectively worked in the pop- ular delft blue. ‘New patterns ia towels are con- Bread and Bread Making. By Helen W. Atwater. From the United States Department of Agriculture Bulletin. NO. 1—DOUGH AND “RAISING.” The Linen Shower embroidery sections of the shops are | ¢ amped on |"? tous, but certain general rules apply te them all. As yeast develops best at o moderately high temperature (77 te @& Gegrees Fahrenheit), the materials of the dough should be at east lukewarm, nd the mizing and the raising should be done in a warm place, as free Possible from drafts. On hand, too high temperatures be avoided, as they kill the yeast. all portions of the dough" are equally serated by the gas from the Srowing yeast the latter must be thor- oughly mixed with the flour and water; Moreover, as the presence of oxygeti aids the growth of the yeast, all parts of the dough should be exposed to the air. Both these results are scoom- plished by the kneading. Too ttle yeast/ will, of course, yiedl @ badly raised loaf, but too much yeast ip just in the gluten of the flour, unable te re sist the pressure of the excessive amount of gas, break open, the gas es capes and the Gough becomes heavy |and soggy. Too much yeast also gives an unpleasant “yeasty” taste to the bread, due partly to the presence of Superfluous yeast cells, but more es- Peclally to other ferments, Even when jused in small quantities yeast has a }deoided Influence on the flavor of the jbread. The amount of yeast which should be used depends on the atrength of the flour. A flour in which the gluten is abundant and tenacious can resiat @ Much stro Pressure of gas than one with scant or weak gluten, which, if it does not fall entirely, is likely to make a loaf with large holes and heat ralsed masses between. Simil Proportion of walter which ehould be ndard cook books sug- f about three parts ef flour to one of water, the ratios chang: ing with the quality of the four, Im wenerul nothing but practical experiesce with the materials can teach the exact quantities which should be mized. alt, added toward the of the mizing; then it Is useful because it checks lactic follow the alcoholic fermentation. It seems almost unnecessary to esy that the greatest cleaniines® should be observed in kneading bread, ————<aewe stantly appearing and . dition in this ine ie ‘ihe ates ‘Turkish towel. Some merely the initial, while others have mailer running floral design, : jowela sell at 25 the former being tac’ oy towel. One pro; Egan free of o) on every towel purchased cents and over. tage, in that If gtres a wen for selection, en the Phen eee is presented el it makes aay on wien oe tante t cotton, ute dij doing work, can be had for 8 conte: aon embroidered eee, A . One of t! is in the bi i The pillow top ie Wet tek” neues ei fee one seen was Scged wil ue plow top Pr a rs cents, . ? PANAMA DEBRi: ‘The earth and rock out of a Canal would fll a tunnel jet In diameter bored througe. earth a¢ the equates, as objectionable, as the bubbles formed .. A ‘ Nsora a used varies with the strength of the "* ae has been sald, tends to retard fer. mentation, and consequently ahould be | or butyric fermentations, such as eften ~* TER: a f Ph ey Val | i) Vi

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