The evening world. Newspaper, March 9, 1914, Page 14

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Ode ebiiihy stor. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH P' iT) Radiished Dally Bases Senter by the Prose Publishing Company, Now had Row. New President, 63 Park Row. Vm Ss Becond-Class Matter. Pumecribten Rates te Tie’ hrenlon Fer tineland end the Continent and att Werld for the United Gtates ) and Caneda, One Fear... 000. One Month.... Countries in the International Postal Union, One Year... One Month. STANDARDIZE MANHATTAN PAVEMENTS. ANHATTAN BOROUGH ecored an advance in progress and seccceceeNO, 19,193 wonemy last Saturday when it opened ite new asphalt plant | —+aid to be the biggest municipal asphalt plant in the world on Avenue A, between Ninctieth and Ninety-firet streets. The new factory, which cost $120,000 and can turn out 3,500 @quare yards of asphalt daily, will get to work on the streets early da April. When George W. McAneny was Borough President he “civilized” Manhattan with at least the beginnings of durable, up-to-date pave- maent, and the new plant was one of his pet schemes. For years the Berough wes shamefully, notoriously cheated by asphalt contractors twhe laid putty pavements at fancy prices. Two years ago a Paving (Oemmittee appointed by the late Mayor Gaynor condemned the pave- tents of Manhattan as “provincial” and “very inferior to those of Siret-cless cities of the old world,” giving as reasons: 7 Lack of knowledge among our engineers of the most ap- proved modern methods of paving as carried on in places out- aide the United States, Restrictive apecifications, especially as regards asphalt, ‘which have prevented genuine competition and given to one interest a monopoly in the making and repair of asphalt pave- ment in Manhattan. Witth avenue with the adjoining hotel and shopping districts o=~thanks to Mr. McAneny’s efforts to break away from old contracts and insist on high-grade msterial—have never been better paved. (hat the good work is to continue we have the word of Borough President Marks, who declared last week that he needed $5,000,000 oepend on pavement improvements this year in Manhattan. “There are many interests at stake,” he reminds tax- its output can be doubled? Why lose @ point where it can produce all the t s ‘NW UPLIFTEB from Kanses guarantess to reduce crime one half in the course of five years if he is allowed to pick college- ‘bred policemen and polloewemen—for, he hastens to declare, ' ‘half of them would be women.” He would put his force te work swith the injunction: ‘ i ‘Tae potceman should be a big brother and the petive- woman a dig eister to every one. y _ + It might be an interesting experiment, but come ether town is | tareloome to try it. The gunman end the burgier with a cix-shooter have their absorbing aspects as human brothers, but the time to probe thelr psychology is not at their busiest moments. A desperate prook samptying his revolver in the street calls for just one line of ection, | 2°" and said action requires no preparatory course in philanthropy. That fe where the policeman comes in. At this point we would rather depend on 8 couple of huskies who @an come out on top in a fight than a whole platoon of college-trained 5 Drothers and sisters. It may be unenlightened, but it eounds eafer, ot ‘After Nature has taken pity: “It wasn’t the heat, It was the humidity!” “It waent theenowfall. It was the frigidity!” Hits From Sharp Wits & bad quarter of an hour,—Bosto: ae doesn't appeal to| Transcript es ‘ eee anda ee In an argument, it is not so much what you have to say but how well you le pointe, conceal the vulnerebi try jeations put to you. . No one with # good opinion of bim- self has an extraordinarily good opin- ‘Deseret News. fon of any one Slow Snow Removal. cross certain streets and I know of ‘Zo the Faiter of The Dveniag World: two women euffering from broken In view of the fact that such en| knee caps received while trying to enormous eum of money has been | alight from atreet F im epent to clear our streets of ic ry ahould think every now, and that so little has could have been ished, would it not be a wise cleared sufficiently to obviate the to Sor gpd to find ove what ony he tr course we have ry a but the | ice, thus e: The Evening World Daily Mag [ The Day of Rest COUNTING ONE HUNDRED Monday: Match 9; 1914 57—A Baker-Boy’s Ambition That Plunged England Into War Tight to the throne than had any other bakerboy. But he per suaded a number of people—some of whom ought te have known oF be CeD: LET'S BE Very QuieT. ME JOHN 10 SLEEP. HE HAD AN AWFUL ATTACK OF INSOMNIA AND DIDN'T SLEEP A WINK ALL NIGHT Little Causes Bm m Of Big Wars By Albert Payson Terhune 1014, ty The Prom Publishing Os, (The Now Took Brenig Weld, BAKER'S eon wanted to be King of England. He hed ne mere Ddetter—that he was the rightful heir to che throne. And @ @alpe war followed. - The boy was Lambert Simnel. He had once helped his father take bread, but had later gone to schoo! near Oxford and had picked up 8 emab tering of education. This education was about as complete es that of the average eight-year-old boy of the present century. But in those dayw of illiteracy it placed Lambert high above his fellows. Also it gave him ideas, For instance, the idea that he could be king. And unscrupulous pelfticiens, feeding this ambition, made him their catspaw. Henry VII. was K! England, having defeated and killed Kiag Rit ard III, But throughout England there were still many adherents to the House of Plantagenet, to which Richard had belonged. These people hate Henry. Knowing that they sought only a good chance to rise againat him, Henry tried to deprive them of a leader by looking up in the Tower of Len Gon the young Hari of Warwick, the nephew and heir of Richaré IIl. Lambert Simnel (prompted by his former school teacher, a man named Simons) announced that he was the Earl and that he had escaped fron: Tower. He and Simons crossed to Dublin and Lambert made public his claim. The Irish, who An Impostors 3 senry, belleved the iad, Amazing Lie. The conspiracy spread. The Earl of Lincoin joined it. So aid the Gowager Duchess of Burgundy, the aunt of the real Earl.. Whether or not the dowager was really deceived or whether si! she did later in the case of Perkin Warbeck) to injure her enemy, Henry, can never be known. But she hired two thousand German mereenary troops and sent them to Irelqnd to swell Lambert's fast-growing army. At Dublin the conspirators crowned Lambert—using a crown that coin imptously took from the head of a statue of the Virgin—and crossed to Lancashire on an invasion of England. But there few to the pretender’s The army of Irish and Germans, with Simons at its head, pushed on toward London. But it did not King Henry marched dgainst the invaders. The two forces met near Stoke, June 16, 1487, and there the culminating battle of the short war was waged. The Irish fought gallantly, and for a time kept the issue of the in doubt. But the King’s troops outnumbered them and the King’s easily outgeneralled thet: Henry lost 2,000 men to Lambert's 4, Lambert was defeated captured, and more than half his were in, the Earl of Lincoln being among the | The kine Sr Blowrda, ‘nsbe tartare, oatieesa Kis ieee of the LS » Col Turne Scullion. § stot, He was thrown into Prison, where soon after. 4 POODPODOODOI LAD ward he died somewhat suddenly. As for Lambert, the King hit on a crafty echeme for preventing him from being looked on aa & martyr. “Movies” A La Mode In Scenario Form By Alma Woodward. — Lunch With Friend Husband. CENE 1—A tady's Boudoir. The missus discovered putting tance finishing touches to elaborate it up to/totlet. A dab of rouge, a smear of utifully carved Italian | Hpetioks “Mi possession, and, I with her husban: Bevas'e meinento of | Seas got he Btres The Proposals Of a Trained Nurse By Wilma Pollock Coprright, 1914, by The Press Publishing Ov, (The New York Evening World), 3.—Nature’s Nobleman. aay © lees helpless|money, which she intended than a babe is a the institution where eb sick man who in oeere, uncertainty clings | was sol to Iife and te de- | T° on the /chest is still ti care of bis nurse | hope, alw: On way to subway, the missus meets marketing friends. All register surprise and ill-concealed envy. The missus informs them. | SCREEN: “Oh, yes, I'm just as my dress when I’m tuneb! jusband, as Iam wi with any one else register doubt and double-d: turns away. Anvil chorus gets busy and bigcks side- SOENE 8—The Subway Station. ved and I ve gladly ga\ drops Priced blond stranger trails alon: gra tion; which I be- The missus enters and finds seat. Handsome biond stranger does not ind seat. Stands in front of missus. Tegistere great agitation. Tries to look like @ frightened bird. Hand- some biond stranger unfolds new: Missus looks wise. SCREEN: only a subterfuge. dear, what shall I dot” tons down handsome, ete., gets out, without backward ginnce. Missus registers astonishment, likewise dis- appointment. Takes mirror from vanity case. Examines countenance. Registers self- satisfaction, Cut to: Scone 5—Friend Husband's Office earrings-in-ears, e/ Hy pb noblemen, ‘When Tony was brought tnto worn himeelf out at treet hand-organ. Tony severe) fom EERILY, verily, my Daughter, there be three things which a man @ son presided over a . I-patronised f boot- 1, A house in which the chairs are too good to hold his feet, and the divans too fine to be lolled upon. 2. A woman who attempteth to convince him that he is WRONG— Lunch hour, Cor- ridor crowded. The missus sheds countless admiring glances there about-to-lunch males. Feels herself | 4 tion of Mona Vanna, Lady blushing confusion, Cut to: 3. To be “found out.” Yea, and Ikewise there be a fourth and a fifth thing which he cannot For, a weeping woman is unto him as a radiator that eputtereth and maketh a distracting nojee; even as a rasor that scratcheth, or a collar with a raw edge, doth she torture bis nerves and cause him continual s among the ft rut, donated by hi “I am go old now,” he would say. 1g the man with a wealth of words sm iy aon eon ee , bobed Missus enters, coughs and eloquent nudges. Ele- vator boy startled into being polite. issue alig! Cc hal For, while a woman's FIRST tear may touch a man, her SECOND merely boreth him; and the rest, as @ wet rag on a starched ebirt-bosom, but rumples bis temper withal. Yet, what are these unto that abomination of abominations, a LADY | CONVERSATIONALIST? Before the sparks of her wit and the shatts of ber repartee he fleeeth in terror. She atriketh him epeechless—but not with delight. For in conversation, as in lif and hankereth for his OWN mov. that chattereth of the ‘ologies, and ecintillateth upon litera- ture and art and New Thought, is as a simple babe beside the damsel that clingeth unto a man’s coat lapel and asketh him foolish questions about himself and his own accomplishments, e For the man that talketh of books and ideas, and the Higher Life wearleth, withal, But a man that discourseth of HIMSELF is never touched with ennul. And she that offereth him bon-mots and brilliancy hath not a chance beuide her that feedeth him bon-mots and flattery. Go to, my Daughter, there are but two ways “around” any man; leadeth through his vanity and the other through his fear. For one woman may bully her way over him, but another can smile her way straight THROUGH him. And this, my Beloved, is the secret of the SPHINX, who hath fas- Cinated men for three thousand years, because she keepeth SILENT and ‘Tony, from whom he hag been Weareth forever the Smlle-That-Woet-Come-OG! and the good things to eat.” han mine would Boone 7—The Outer Office. ity and a debutante si i by missus at I could never dream of marrying him. The light ing trom his eyes and I should only man wanteth only an AUDIENCE; @ game of chess. 4 8c IN: “That girl lcene 8&—The Boss's Office. Enter missus, Boss motions Missus dreams rode , Otc, A Bcene 9—A Rothakelier Restaurant, lines in Italian and eigned his name night we sent for bis chil- dren; and @ priest sat with us as he final prayers. When communication was read, erybody'’s consternation carved walnut C4 " property, and gleams entire fortune of five hundred dollars, at him and replies. SCREEN: “You order for me, dear, like you used to before we were married!" husband instruats waiter. SCREEN: | queathed to me, y's sons, who inherited their father’s nobility of character, would not touch one cent of which was theira by rig! the to ohari When, one day, there arrived at the ital a nun, @ sister of the de- Instead of beheading or imprisoning the pretender, he mada Lambert a scullion in the royal kitchen, And there the baker's boy settled down con- tentediy. He would have made a very poor king, but he proved himecif se good a kitchen helper that he was at last promoted to a post among. the falconcra—a job less glittering than a monarch’s, but far safer. ~asneapeaeasionnnmecmsenranes eng Lana Recipes of Words You Use Famous Women. Mrs. Henry George Jr. (Wite of the Congresamas.) Southern Hash. one pound of ground raw or cooked meat, one large onion (ground), one green pepper (ground\, one cup of strained toma- ites tablespoon melted butter,|"afen ‘continually: ee tor color teeta ‘one cup of cooked rice. Salt and pep- | river: the river flows contin . Ber oe emset bake one-half hour in| pr iea—in the legal sense, this J is grossly misused. One reads that Chocolate Farina Pudding. the lawyer during a trial “ OOK one tablespoon of cream of /S7, eloquent plea, te the fury wheat in a quart of milk, stir- 4 ring constantly for about fifteen minutes; then dissolve one ounce of ie preperiy fhocolate in a little milk, add to} used only of she pleadings or armaten- jugar to sweeten, melted choc- Gente Eee orn ee trial, wy @ teaspoon of vanilla flavor- to rve cold with whipped cream. bl eal may either to the Court or the re game applies (still in the to the verbs “to plead” and argue.” * THING is supported at the shoul- ders and un- condined ae XB waist line - paps the best for little children, This petticoat is very charming in a sim- je, dainty way closed by meahs of buttons and but- tonholes at the shoulders, the back rtion being cut to figure it ie made o re it is goal. ty, whl gives a certain sense of refinement not to be found in any other trim- min g. Children's frocks must b Int back view the neck and armhole edges are finished with underfacings and barrow frills. ier te Seaton afar Li 7 ren ies oy Baitera Ne. 621: “> Be guar 2 te 6 years. ds of material $6, % yard 44 inches 8 ide forthe ruler 'Tg se tnchen wie wih AM Zarda of sebeeiaery tern Nor 6844 is cut’ in"aizes tron Stee ease ‘ Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON F, BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second etrest ‘ite Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-sccsnd New York, or sent by mall op receipt of ten cents in eola OF. stamps for each pattern ordered, t SMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and alwaye apecity \ine-weated, Add two conte fm letter postage tf in a berry

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