The evening world. Newspaper, May 21, 1914, Page 18

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ay: M By Maurice Ketten|| The Evening World Daily Magazine: Thursd The Push-Button Board |= NEW HAVEN BOARD ef DIRECTORS af ESTABLISHED BY JOSHPH FOLITERR, a Dally Excep day by the Prees Publishing Company, > iy xcept BuNsark Now. New York, PULITZUR, President, #2 Park. Row. | ANGUS 7» Treasurer, 0" sostrn PULITZER, Jr., Secretary, Bark tow. Ronn of Directo ADY To VoTe ? nd-Ciase Matter. eT For neta’ and the Continent and ‘All Countries in the International Postal Unio at the ron tes to e for the United States end Canada, by ‘The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), [E 54 NO. 19,266 J": and the world jokes with youy GRASS FIRST. OADWAYS in Central Park, which under the Stover adminis- Preach, and it lets you alone. a2 But the sermon that's set to the tune of a laugh Makes the devil sit up—-and groan! M No woman will ever take a real step up the Ladder of Progress #0 ; 7 the city continuel anguish and expense, are long as she wears a skirt so tight that she can hardly atep onto > again up for discussion. street car, A A ayer ran Gant eafor Some men aré so tngenuous that they would actually be astonished gore funds to re-ley the remaining drives. Gravel roadways do not if @ Tittan-haired widow did not greet their proposals of marriage with fed the wear and tear of automobile traffic. The bituminous pave- Bp yee te godt od, on the North and East Drives has proved so satisfactory thet ® Commissioner asks for 2 $375,000 ieaue Of corporate stock to pro- A man’s notion of being noblo and generous in a quarrel with his rf NEW HAVEN wife {is to treat her righteous indignation just a ymptom of hysteria, Sukie we opus 0 “np a ape wbaie of DIRECTORS \ and pat her on the back, when he ought to be cenetor her pardon. to year. s [> Btnce 1912 $200,000 has been epent improving Central Park road- | Jaye, principally the West Drive. Everybody hopes thet in time the . — Park may be as perfect as care and money can make When « man says it wouldn't be “honorable” to make love tea certain girl, he usually means that it wouldn't be wise or safe or interesting. SP "The public cannot forget a far more crying need. Central Park bw lacks the first requisite of a park—serviceable lawns. Only a : Park Oommissioner reported that big grass plots at south ends of the park would probably have to be the public through the present season. Nor could To be young glorifies a woman in a man’s eyes, to be old inspires him with reverence; the only crime which he can never forgive her is that of being middle-aged. . A Futurist philosopher has advocated the policy of brightening up the sad things of life, such as fllness, hospitals, funerals, ete, by making light of them; but, even HE has not the temerity to suggest any way of $90,000 epent in the past two evel’ make grease | brightening up a wedding or making a joke of matrimony. Park hes produced only “dismal failure.’ must in any degree choose between spending imme- ‘The most pathetic sight on earth is that of a great, big man wandering through @ great big department store looking for a paper of pins. yy in It late gums on park roads or park turf the latter should have first { | ance. Lewns not too tender for tired people to walk and sit on | present the most needed features in the development of Central a ‘Any available money shoud be devoted first of all to expert pa THe Seco ition. ROPOSITION “Hesitation” 1s the thief of time. NEW HAVEN BOARD of DIRECTORS The “Mountain of Light’ Diamond. HE first owner of the famous, lack of skill of a Venetian lapidary, ” THAT Masta Coreen | wolantagn S19 atata Ation teeoatee * carats. ir i Tight" diamond was, according | ine Sf Delhi in 1789 the dismecd ment © Not long ago the Park Commissioner himeelf described our parks a “barren wastes in which playgrounds and gymnasium aress are a on % to crowd out green grass.” “We have obliterated our parks ‘one except those between the ages of five andeight. Moth- babies need verdant plots.” ‘This applies to the city’s equeres and smaller parks. It also : Central Park. If improvements must take their turn, give ‘Public that goes to the park for rest first benefit and let who only whirl through ite drives on their way to other come second. SS — eee ~- The New England Navigation Company seems to have “(heen manned by G@runken sailors. a THE ARCH-FIREBUG. a VERY New Yorker should devote‘s litle serious thought to Fire Commissioner Adamson’s figures bearing on carelessness as a cause of fires. " Laat year’s record of avoidable city fires and their causes runs: Me etters From the People Carelessness with cigars and cigarettes. matebes furnaces foul street bonfires . gas ranges and radiators. 5 Overbeated fues, stovepipes and chimneys in letting children play with fire Gasoline, beasine, ete. + 1,079 fires 11% " + 1,068 18 96 198 688 361 30 many people hereabouts can truthfully say they never take im any of the above ways? Thousands take greater or less ‘every day. With many “nothing has happened yet.” Maybe it will. ‘ Onl; nineteen fires in this city lest year were caused by the cle- itt. ‘The rest were due to carelessness, neglect or criminality. ‘Why does the latest American Year Book find fteelf compelled that: Despite the increasing efforts of various agencies during ‘fecent years to limit the number and size of fires, the absolute mount of waste has declined but slightly, the per capita leases jn this country still exceeding those of leading European evuntsies by from five to six times. ‘hmong ite various safety crusades, isn’t it about time for New ‘to set the country an example with an intelligent and vigorous ign against the arch-firebug—Carelessness? ———— 4 Stalwart or slender, purpureal or pale, how the Colonel brightens up the country! Dreniog it “The Wife's Woea" and ™ man give his wife his pay v Luckily my husband and all that before we were six years ago, He agreed 2 out of his pay (which was week), and after the baby was he took only $1.50 instead. He this change without my saying And what is more, and good, warm underwear for win- ter, Living out of the city, we have to pay far more for our meat, In fact, everything is very high priced, When a man does not wish to hand over hia money he has no business to get married. A man should not get married until he finds the woman whom he knows he can trust with his hard-earned salary. There are too many women who would blow it in on style and foolishness, E. Cannot tw: moe strawberry short- cake be abolished? This is a much- needed reform, A piece of this double- decked delusion is set bef ‘Two golden-ed, by a flute of certainly looks good. accept it at ite face value, plunge their forks into it and swallow the whole ovucuctivn without question, . | should be praised.-Macon Telegraph, Straight From The Shoulder buccess Talks to Young Men, wrt. thes Yost eaina Wea Orderliness. YOUNG man should always have “his house in order.” If he works with tools, they should have each their ap- pointed place, and should be kept in that place when they are not in use. And they ‘should be ever ready for instant, une. Whether his “tools” are instru- ments, or books, or papers, or stock, or office paraphernalia, so be it the: are the things with which his wor! is done, they should be always against the emergency that calls for them at a pete Gottee. r le the young man who prepared against the sudden em: ency in the workaday world who is ready to press his tools into instan: gervice, who domonstrates to the “boss” that he always can de- er what circum. pected confront pended upon, no stances of the un MR a @ sloven whose tools must be sharpened, whose papera must fret be sorted, whose columns must firat be footed up, whose data must first be found, whose lists must first be arranged and who therefore must waste le time before he can mergency, makes an un- impreasion on his for be demonstrates that he nw ait 2 ted depended on every hour of the ‘A. surgeon who had to stop to and sharpen his instruments woul be a Boor one to summon C4 ® critical operation when sec sana ite.” onde counted ou the surgeon of your own ‘future. See that your ini | are sharp—and at hand, etrumente Hits From Sharp Wits, As Gov. McCreary says, a man as old as he feels, but 54 is Rot i ways as strong as he foels in a Bond torlal contest.—Loulsville Post. . An unknown actress fell in river at Racine while trying to bosee @ steamer and lost jewelry and cash, Now she 4s known.—Milwaukee Sen- tinel. . Many @ man with a clear conscience has a cloudy memory, ee 8 ‘The mere fact that a baby resem- bles its father is no Teason, why it e Speech cannot mean anything un-| 4 lens thought precedes it, ee The fellow with a ch shoulder soon meets his eae But lift the upper layer. Let us poe the vell of Would non, what exposed, exce; way at none of the that go into the ‘the atraw- t, are discard ed bany Journal. ° our pioneer ancestors were t lice, when pio! What You Sh ould Eat And Why to Eat It €IENCE is once more wrestling with the food problem and try- ing to reconcile a universal diet with the old proverb: “One man's meat is another man's poison.” What shall we eat? This question ig being asked by millions of people, and thousands of experts, real and self-styled, have at- tempted to answer it. Hundreds of dietetics systems have been devised, and each has its enthusiastic adher- ents, But “What is one man’s meat is another's poison,” still holds true. Individual differences and peculiarities render even the best of “systems” im- possible lke general adop- tion. In the “good old days” in Amer- two-fisted, ing the diet question wasn't consid ex- cept aa it concerned ways and means of getting “grub.” A healthy life in the open enabled them to digest almost anything. To-day, however, most of the in- habitants of our cities are employed in sedentary pursuits and get com- paratively little exercise and fresh air, with the result that they are unable to preserve their health under the regimen of their fathers, Their digestive organs refuse te perform their functions, the food ferments and the system is filled with poisons. ‘Dyspepsia, anaemia and neuras- thenta follow as the ‘ogical results of disordered digestion and faulty nu- one cal cult coming so common, jon, slowly starving ad are, in to death. sive Seenerery. symptoms by of poison generated from un: food, but such @ course di strike at the real cause of the ake sumMicient exercise in the o bring about @ more ass! cal exercise or wo Taper ‘pot we ast arin ry 0. reat a it Sufficient important half an hour after eating. sleep ia also absolutely I consider spinach is the other vege! salts, and is especially rich ing it the idealiapring medic: Second in value among t tables, according to tables mon use. Radish onions, asparagus and being especially rich phosphorus. trition, ‘This condition has given rise to the charge that Americans are a race of gluttons. It is alleged that they eat foo much and that the remedy i reduction in the amount of food Some “experts” even go 80 urge frequent and long- jods of fasting. Says ee, & far continued Glimpse Into New York Shops RPP PPP PPP LPP PPL PPD POLLED DDL DOD LPL LLL, HEN a dress can be success- fully laundered and ia. guar- anteed not to wrinkle {t com- bines two essentials of the summer frock that !s intended for general wear, A cloth that covers these re- in stripes, chee! ailin Soloringe, inches wide and t Pe alarms are the ideal children io wees eres even when Pace Rega cf price is tionally y: “Bven the children wearing capes. Attractive mudele in biuo serge, with a hood, are lined with red A Canadian preacher predicts the time wi come, Wen Here = be no eo \ticlang ‘Knoxville Journal ailk and strings of the same afford effective frien » ‘These are $18.60, The silk and tassel now s0 The strawberry contains a lar, proporties than any other fruit suc! Small coraline hat pearl tractive and sell at 85 cents. je colored silk or velvet ties with pendants at the ends can pe be had at 60 cents. These ties give a bright touch to the summ aro sharing favor with beads. A ¢ qth alternate it thous aro $8.50. ‘With the picnic and tra at hand it terest ular sci - iar lence expert and phys! “The dyspeptic, anaemic, neuras- thenio type of people, who are be- opin- A re- duction in the amount of food may relief from their lessening the amount ‘rouble, which is under-nutrition. The rom edy for this class of peop'e is not less food, but more—provided they Miation of food. Pleaty of physi- rk and fren, air most valuable of all vegetables. Spinach contains a higher proportion than any le of these important in sul- phur, tron, sodium and calcium, mak- vege- made b; ‘German scientists, is lettuce, whic! provides @ far larger proportion of iron than any other vegetable in com- cucum- bers, SRDETSEUA 6 flower and car- also highly recommended, ou- es} ° valuable salts as iron, sulphur, sodium, calcium and silicon, the only exceptions being that lemons contain tly more calcium. Other very bl tpins with or rbinestone-centred © pit forming the head are decidedly at- Popular C Bad Home Cooking And Hotel Fare By Sophie Irene Loeb Com is Var be Neate perous, stated: “One of the reasons i that) 4, home was well it ant girl the chef trained in thi They do it to get the Grat pick. im | 004 as in lots of other struggled with food either a bu} even if the price ia bight" Not only the hotel but the delica- man is also tessen Ford's assertions; for there are throughout the city, rune may delectable dinner that make. It is a ot antag life. But even the farmer's wi the advent of th hotel to pay for week. But i it just food, these people see! and the brass buttons and the ping of corks that attract? this should not be ) A of cooking is comes @ habit to t! Jobster-palace several times a there fo many a family and nothing to show for it. meal. extrevegent in this add to headache in the the wise housew!! out 4 jpstraction, usta teas tee Boy you can’t expect the Hibernian Jady of recent im-| My determination was increased by portation or the Scandinavian peas- | Jac! who became cook the| *fter moment her foot touched the magic| anq told me to buy C ehores of the United States to rival | it is in for a big advance. art from child- hood, And then the hotels pay more for their foodstuffs than private| turned; for, as is always the case, in families do, although they buy more, | moving the fret is the thing that counts in plok : bad been “Yes, take it from me, home cook- ing nowadays helps the hotel men al- a most as much at it does the doctors. It was the best thing that ever hap- pened to them. When the family has| turned out right, we would find a lot half! and build a house, or find one cooked or half burned, indigestible, | putit that we could buy on long time unnutritious, tasteless and tough, is it any wonder thet next night father and mother sneak off to a good hotel ves & square meal, sands of delicatessen shops scattered where she who hase hurriedly the a city ever entered 1 Nt ni with But Sak must be encouraged in thie telephone, “orders” | mood. “bother.” fe dinner, the tb Te it not the lights and the music to D- point of sesking Fo! ing is so quickly forgotten as | recen’ importation o: aon ‘al lela for money apaat vian girl” bow things ‘morning, | to do things like the hotel het, with |to legend, the hero Karna, whose deeds are celebrated in the “Mahab- harata,” and who is sald to have carried the great stone some 5,000 | years The Kohinoor, brought jto England from India sixty-four } Ts ago, and presented to Queen | Victoria the following July, made its first authentic appearance in history in the fourteenth century, when Ala- ed-din carried it to Deihi. At that |carata, “Tt appearea tn the’ greet aia carat aD! great di mond market of Goloonda in 1550. Th to Afghanistan, and it belonged in turn to several Afghan rulers. Thaace it came into the possession of the Bikh chief, Runjeet Singh. Upon the ab- ication of the last ruler of the Pun- jab, and the annexation of Ris do- minions to the British empire, in 1849, the great stone became the prop- erty of the East India Company, and was by it presented to Queen Vic- toria. It was recut soon afterward, and now weighs 1031-4 carats. It is beyond price, although $10,000,000 has been given as a fair valuation, Chapters From a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond. Coorright, 2016, by The Prem Pubitshing Oo, (The Now York Evening Wold), OHAPTER XXXIII. ACK’S mother and sister re- mained with us nearly two ‘weeks, and assured us when they left that they had en- Joyed their visit immensely. To Jack's delight, they complimented my housekeeping, especially my cook- ing. IMEON Ford, the last of the ol4| ‘ter they left Jack and I compared fashioned jeepers, when notes—and for the first time I was asked ee “gorgeous | Perfectly frank with bim about the hotels” are pros- expense. I figured that it was for is people, ao there was no need for to worry. We found that we had nt far more than we should, in @ of the $50 raise. So Jack could nothing but agree when I said we cooking | would have to run in debt for what these days is ex-| we needed until next pay day. tremely bum. In the old 4ay8/|gayety had brightened Jack wonder- when our women | fully. folk did their|to impress upon him the need of own cooking it doubtiess Mt Gone, but ince friends occasionally and go The two weeks during which we 4 enjoyed much unaccustomed Now was the time, I thought, making more money than he could salaried man, so that we could live @ more social life, enter- out oftener, getting him to money as @ beginning. use my remarking one eveni! econ day, Sue, “ as ‘Senator Crispin w: a = in to~ c. X. “Ob, how I wish you could buy it. n we could have the thin, Pe ey for the apartment,” I r we found that we needed id not have in things that we < . ms og) it them. mighty friendly,” apropos of nothing. “Why not let his friendliness do some good, then?” I asked, “If I could take his tip, and it ready yyment ff doing anything more ne, tpn we would have a the kiddies to run. I guess etand living out of New Toten adored ants children, and would Jat that time have hesitated at no eacrifice that he thought might bene- St Wouldn't that be lovely!" I ex- or to buy one, had ovals rome 8s tf enn set “It 1d make a killing you girl to help you tote the |3fi etna to plan and bulld ted to plan an Soe) *yeok continued, 90 inter- ted that he did not observe my as- tonishment. i buy_the stock in gone ter ‘oioe? You Sew. we re tae aoe ly of my Httle bank pocketbook | found it out I might lose my position that has a big hole taken out of it, the Scandina. should be don ‘These foreigners cannot be expected proper . And it bane Jat @ halt sand with two kiddies I "t afford to take any chances,” he fatshed, T Hoag regretfully. ell, perhaps you're right,” ° ewered, delighted at the Sonat was making, but ing to push my advantage too hard, forgetting that a continual dropping will wear away the strongest resolution. “But it @eems too bad when you have such chances not to tako advantage of them. Tho children will cost more as they grow older. And we will want them to know the right kind of poopie, which Fespilggeresnd impossible ave to be fo: ind ; Ps rever pinching “I know, girlie, It make: ~. most wild when I think how ‘hard a have to work with the two babies, We shouldn't heve moved, Then you ere sued & good mald instead at cl Roure ae Hid two or three e said nothing more the children had been Duk i> aa They had their usual nightly rom; with their father. (I always wondered who enjoyed it most.) They were healthy, good babies, and avorahipped them, lo wish thore was some ” sald as wo eat in the living Tooke, H mending and Jack smoking and reading the paper. out cigars entirely nneg’ ond wale Tha pe, I coul ‘ot very well ob. T do, too,” he replied, trae bade Ba oeen fo ae to what I referred. ing Jack, I saw : not reading the paper, Dut wa anes ing over thénic. about what we had been talking “gre Jack eed the amell of ae “Why, it's easy! 1 "1 x Gaus think of it before, nga stopp 4 your everlasting*nagging me suppose I } for. he at once Spatowiced” SOERERS rgive me, Sue, but it's true; Almost every Gay for the leat veo: you have said something about it, But never mind! I think f see = way now, and you'll never throw it up to ‘ T don't make aH the - (rd all,” + “How mi we ‘You haven't touched | it ve “Yea"—I Ned giibly—7 te Uttle extra when your eee ona sister were here—matiness, eto, Then I think wo better leave a little in the bank”—thinking of the $85 1 still owed ry Loraine for my, blouse, and of 0 ord we use? 3 ba “But we won't dare t t” I asked, astonishes ti (To Be Continued.) for of home 11 a pom ‘cooking. She is wolng te ‘We may live with ty si Nae y live 7. se eut conscience, ‘ AN A

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