Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ei SSTABLIGHDD BY JOSEPH PULITZER. ‘ Dally Except the Press Publishing C 1, Nos, 63 to bert tid How. New York. ne Company, Son TB Bho. cscs awessscccecceess seeeceeeescee NO, 19,296 MAKE IT PUNISHMENT. EAM WORK on the part of Magistrates will slow down auto- mobile speeders in short order. Of forty-four motor car owners and chauffeurs arraigned Police Magistrates in Manhattan and the Bronx last Wednes- @ charges of exceeding the speed limit, Chief Magistrate figures show that thirty-four were given the minimum ef $25 fine or two days in jail. Two got the intermediate of $80 fine and the rest were cither discharged or released be oan sentencss. Of course, all paid fines and nobody _ |, Why eo often the minimum penalty? Doos anybody drive a car elty who can plead ignorance of the riske involved in reckless ef motor vehicles? Have the efforts of Magistrates, city ile and indignant citizens organized in safety societies for public failed to penetrate the selfish indifference of tho motorists? ly pretend not to know the heavy responsibilities which miguse of the automobile has laid upon each and every ws hope Chief Magistrate McAdoo is ready to direct all ites to impose the maximum penalty on any one who wantonly Fila life and limb through reckless driving. Seventy-five dollars Wer five days in jail is none too severe. It should be the maximum flor the firet offense It should be jail for the second. Put Se persuasion and try punishment. ‘ he _—_—___—t— Mayor Mitchel] has invited three college professors and a Bs Glass of political science students to study the city’s problems. ‘Meanwhile maybe one good business man could eliminate a few. BY, ns SINKS IN BRITISH CONSISTENCY. LADY: who doesn't eat unless she wants to reclines for ten \- minutes among cushions on the steps of the House of Com- ™ mons and the British Premier gives in and agrees to do what bald he wouldn’t do. nation! If it is just and right to receive a delegation | now, why wasn’t it just and right to receive them in the | ? Why sternly suppress militant methods and then weakly | they accomplish exactly what they set out to accomplish? | Prime Minister yielded, we are told, in order to eave Sylvia from starvation. Therefore Miss Pankhurst is persuaded, lly, that she has won a great victory. Scores of her || followers will make haste to starve on the doorsteps of hard- mers of Parliainent until they win pledges of support for Prestden' Row. wie us (914 BATHING SuiT ITS SHOCKING | either a sign that he's dead to-fall-off effect nowadays. But cheer uw; the passing of the Reno craze perhaps of “a crowd.” GET in There AND TARE OFF | THAT BATHING SurT’ to eat!” rather grates on her nerves. a New York cross street and as set as telpiece. A woman's love is never dead 60 1 other man’s fault when her husband HILDREN'S garments that re- C quirg only the embroidery to complete tiem for wear are now being featured in the shops arid afford a means for obtaining smart little dresses at a nominal cost. There 1s one mode! in mercerized poplin with the new flounced skirt and long waist effect, with a pretty design stamped in front. It can be had in blue and pink at 75 cents. There is a two-piece middy blouse suit in French pique made up with a kilt skirt. The collar and sleeves are stamped for embroidery and scal- |loped edge. It can.be had in siz6s for children from four to ten years old and the price of the former is $2. | Then there © cute little white lawn | dresses with the rouhd yoke and ‘sleeves in dainty floral designs at » Sve iT ‘oO NE, 1 LL SHow IT bray or sheer lawn are stamped in | neat cross-stitched patterns to be worked in Dreaden colorings, and ons of people are now ready to believe that fainting is going to get British women the vote. what is the matter with the British mind that it takes such painful turns getting around a plain corner? Fens + The Yale crow beat the Harvard crew by afoot. Don't de- Ccabed eend the doy to Yale til! after the final ball game to-day. eee ge pipiens * THE NEW COLUMBUS. something to have been among those present on one of the ates in the world’s progress. If Lieut. Porte flies across Atlantic next month we shall teach our children and grand- to put down 1914 along with 1492 as one of the red letter the record of human achievement. ‘attempt will be in many ways the most interesting event ean 00 far boast. That it will be in the hands of a }end careful aviator, who is quite outside the class of trick aerial acrobats, ie made clear by The Sunday World Maga- : im an artivle which discusses the character, achieve- and plans of Lieut Porte. the airman nor his backer, Mr. Rodman Wanamaker, | y, rote F W = bose'a bose—bis wife. blaintively. ed him with scorn. Just where I am going and how I am going to get there,” )the Lieutenant—which, ae he points out, gives him a big over Columbus. sailed into the unknown to find a waterway and stum- continent. with your poor old bald bead!” torted his fair young bride. “Clara os signals and wireless messages will flash to and fro over ‘ tom from the moment the Lieutenant rises from the American and his followers groped their way over the Atlantic Beswnces: ak)” and alone. MLetters From the People| “AP Train Experience. Haw of The Brening World: ‘time ago I gave up my seat train to a woman who did cast a look at me in she was comfortably sees only a reflect Albany Journal. of lam, often amid misery. that patriotism and need are in trade, I which the speaker said ‘You have the flag and can shout and wave it e's all day long, even protect it with lows} Lots of life. But they | agore sles wealthy) have the count make you do as they wis) wrong in all this, I will set me right. It seems ° The ways of Deseret News, ° y and can ent, If Tam of artistic tempe: ° . R.A. Z, what they wal ee ro can I tind how the United! graay says while wafting Navy ranks in the world’s navies and how other navies rank? i. mercial Appeal. = Possibly because marin Where ts there a school in New| are popularly considered York where I could learn drawing | feminine gender is the reason free. C.F, | succeeding ia “the last At Cooper Union, ‘To the Biitor of ‘The Brening World: Surcasm ae thought you'd be giad to wee us, my dear,” satd Mr. Jarra bows to the ¢¢ 7 And be said it very Mrs. Clara Mudridge-Bmith regard- “You must have been in # dreadful ; urry to met down here to the seaside sensational start, leaving luck to take care of the finish. | that you came without your hat.” “Why, yes,” replied the old man, “I thought it would be romantic.” "You'll find it will be rheumatic, erfectiy right,” eaid Peoples on both sides of the earth will exchange | atrs. Jerr id ce Mecoaed “You've telegrams, hundreds of ships will search the heavens with| made an awful show of us; riding up to the hotelin a taxicab with no bate and with your faces flushed as though you had@ been drinking. What will ra. Mrs Derringer say? What will Mre. “Aw, I don't care what they aay or When Lieut. Porte flies across the whole world | what they think!” snapped Mr. Jarr. <== ———| Hits From Sharp Wits. The man who Satters himself that he can see through others usually Dimeelf. partners jan on the sunny ce heard a speech in| side of Kasy street may be ebady.— bean kicked (meaning the over and doors slammed in the name hope some reader! ‘The man In office who gives the ' people what they want will be more populag. than the one who tells them Toledo Blade something to turn up you are more than likely to be turned dowa.—Com- word” shipbullding.—Philadelphia Inqutrer. Boasting imprenses only. tnfertor these are only 25 cents in sizes for | woman's fault when he gets into @ flirtation. | garment. lcents, Little kimono frocks of cham- | Coprright, 1014, by ‘The Pres Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening Would), Wren &@ man begins bringing his best friend to call on a girl it fe, sure of her and can't lose her or that he’s dead tired and can’t lose her. * How etyles do change! Even wedding rings have that foppy, about. >. With the coming of the basque aad they too will grow tighter. . A woman always looks back on an old flame as a man she “might have gotten;” @ man looks back on one as a girl who “might have got him." = + To @ man competition may be the life of the love game, bet aethiag ee takes the life out of a girl's infatuation as to discover that she is only ese e After a girl has been watching the romantic lovemaking of © curity. . hatred movie hero all evening the terrestrial being in a straw hat whe leeds, her out by the elbow and nonchalantly remarks, “Now let's get comething ‘The average man's ideas of what a woman ought to be are as narrow a5 two marble images on @ parlor mina- ve? jong as she still believes that {tts the stays out late mights and the other Eternity: The interval between the time when your husband promises to be home and the time when he actually arrives. ors i Art Needlework for Summer } in simple designs. A romper for the two-year-old or a creeper for ¢he baby can be had in pink or Blue chambray or in white at 3% cents. Cute white aprons that will do for dresses during the hot days are of cross-barred lawn bound in blue or pink, the simple floral design across the front to be worked {n the same color. When tied at the side with colored ribbon it makes an attractive One pattern in these ap! sells at 10 centa. The young girls will like the new washable girdles made up of white mercerized poplin and linen, in blue, pink and lavender. Some are merely girdles finished in an effective de two flowing ends and some are thi draped at one side in the prevailing the wearer. The sta range from 50 centa to $1. has the new upstanding collar, which children from one to four years. Rompers in chambray, crepe, poplin, and linen are well mad Listen! Mr. Jarr, With Just 74 Cents, Is Marooned Upon a Desolate Beach debbie ees ing einisbicteteietetee itt: ie that Mra. Clara Mudridge-Smith bad her husband to one aide of the piazza croas-exainining him, and Mra. Jarr pee her husband at a discreet dis- ‘this lp @ nice cake of ice to band a “of man who runs to catch a train with- out stopping to get his hat! And me ane how surprised and happy you'd be!” with a hat,” said Mrs, Jarr. course, I would have been frightened to death to get a telegram like that, because 1 would think it meant that something had happened to the chil- dren. But aetill, it would have been more thoughtful of you.” Meanwhile, it mast be remembered OHAPTER XLVI. D ACK, why ure you #0 fool- 66! tab, s0 afraid of people?” “What have I done or left undone now, Sue?” “I have been thinking of what yeutold me. That Ned Somers was willing to carry # thousand shares of stock for you, {f you would give him the information that is not only given you without asking, but “The old man thought you two would be pleased if we caught a train and come down,” grumbled Mr. Jurr. “Bo we ran out of the resti without paying our check for jeon or getting our hats. Jumped out of the taxi, bein: time to catch the train, and boss, without thinking, told the taxi driver to walt, and there he'll wait until we come back Monday—at two dollars an hour—that is, the taxi will wait for the old man to come back next Mon- day, but as for me I'm going to beat it back on the next train; and the taxi driver won't see me, either. I kaow when I get shoved out on the “You might have telegraphed me: ‘Will arrive unexpectedly as @ sur- prise to you. Meet me at the depot =The Wecek’s Wash] By Martin Green Cogetight, 1016, ty the Pree Pubtidhing Go, (The New York Evening World), UR statesmen of both the/@ joke by real election reformers. 0}4 parties appear to be tee ae dictate ee go mentally scrambled O¥8r| chines elect the candidates. the new primary) “Political bosses who keep up with law,” remarked pk times Col swage reaia their the head polisher. on @ pal organisation, unless “Ie a ease of| (rey, are Coates organiza‘ ‘Now that you've got it what are you going to do realize what we would have made if C. C. L. and another thousand of ‘Transatlantic?’ 1 asked, looking closely at him. “We would have been almost independent, and could have built any kind of a house we “You are a mean, jealous, euspi- cious, horrid old man!” whimpered Mrs, Clara Mudridge-Smith to her husband. “Here I am at the seaside, at @ convention of the Associated Lineage, Literary and Equal Rights ‘Women's Clubs, and what I have best argument I could use. “Now, Bue,” he answered, impa- with ith” ex- been through with fighting that cat, | tently, “wi the use? Do stop \° Mre, Marmaduke Stalker, for the 2 Te- plained the deun Presidency! And yet you think Ym jpascing ype about making money! éry man. “At the Kniokerbocker conference we were presented with the Laer 9 @pectacte of the very reformers were the loudest shouters for the di- rect primary law trying to figure out some plan to evade it. “They wanted the pee-pul to select their own candidates. They got their wish, That is, they got @ law which permits the pee-pul to go into the primaries and pick out the men they want to vote for, And, with what they wanted set right before them, they show that they don't want the ee fermentation, so to speak, the Tam- fought for the reten- tate convention. The re- formers wouldn't mand for any kind of a convention. They insisted that the whole burden of nominating suit- able candidates be put up to the pee- ul. The reformers had their way. fe no provision in the law for ® State convention to select candi tes, dates. “And here risk of being thrown I've run th . T've already done. Do out for wh let me alone! i “Supposing they do! You hi money enous’ to live on for a li while, I wouldn't be so afraid of any one as you are of Mr, Flam for anything!” 1 felt injured that he, my sunny tempered husband, should answer me so, accuse me of nagging—forgetting that bis sunny disposition was feat becoming a thing of the past. ‘m not cross, Sue! T don’t mean to be, But it ms to me that money and clothes 1) you think of nowadays, You used to be interested in our reading, in our sim- ple pleasures, those could afford, I don't eee what's come over you.” “Don't talk to me about SIMPLE pleasures!” 1 replied, “I toid you the other day that if we couldn't do things the way I wanted to I didn’t care to do them at all! 'm tired of being a calls it, So le sh the same about it as I do. ¥« Clifton should be put in a bag and shaken up together!" “Really, Sue,” Jack answered, look- ing at me in satoniahingns at my out- bad the Colonel has lost hie voice,” said the head 66 ‘voloe; and he ts due to lose his goat about the time he lands in New York Mext week. In his absence some of it they ought to have something to say about how things should be rus. “No doubt « few of them are firing ebots loaded by the Colonel before he went away. But otbers thelr ow! not know, at — dancing and flirting!” “Why, no, my dear; I never thought of such a thing!” argued the fatuous OMe nw eay Tm too usty to. interent way ni { 1 Bay nobody would care to flirt cried the Irritable ire . “Oh, that I ive to be told I was ugly and had no ehape and had lost all my attractions and that nobody would look at me!" “Bat, my dear, I never thought of such a@ thi Pleaded the old man. “My popsy regular little daszler, and T am not jealous of her.” Hie little popsy was mo more pleased at this, “You're not a bit Jealous of me be- use you think nobody would look me a second time,” cried Mrs. Mudridge-Smith, stamping a bronze alippered foot. “Just for that I'll flirt with every nice man and I'll dance with every nice man, and I won't mit with yor or dance with yor Having thus read her declaration of independence in case her husband would resent being slighted, the young matron again inquired why she was treated with suspicion and also wished to bien. if her husband thought you'd be #0 pleased to see me!” faltered the old man. “Ob, no, I'm not course, I'm jeal with such for @ veasele to be of the each seo iaenaercens scm eer costs you nothing. Why, Jack, do you; we had bought a thousand shares of | wanted to,” knowing that to be the) sign, such as a butterfly, others hay yards in length and-—intended to be: Passed about the walstrtwice and! mode. They are entirely made Up, the girdle length to be adjusted to” im ped are more or less olaborate and 4 A new offering is the impe of organdy with a net foundations It ia stamped in a delicate pat as, is also the front of the cuimper "Re price of this pretty up-to-date neck ‘and stamped | fixing ts 25 centa, Chapters From a Woman’s Life _ By Dale Drummond. Coperight, 1916, by The Pree Publisding Co (The New York Dvening World), ference. 1 feel like a cad, now, every. time Mr. Flam speaks so pleasantly to me. 1 was strongly tempted to-day to tell him that the Susan Hamlin ac- count was yours, to have you draw it, and quit specylating. Uniess one has | money enough to afford to play with board, It isn't worth ere irritedly. Flam hasn't lost anything, 9 | ibe ‘8 & question whether being paid if ta to throw away the chance of mak alwaye that!" I blustered, tell him things that are told me ve | | } \ Ss “Don't be silly!” I exploded. “Just as fen't we have mi a little can be intereated in stocks, thi jisn't so, and has lost nothing, I deal. Losing shes @ good deal to ing @ fortune because he was “Don't talk any more abont ft, Sue. confidence.” wo are getting a little ahead is no e slightly, and give hi have lost a ‘Don't preach! So. you aren't golri to take a chance, AFRAID to act on Ned Somers will have to go samé- T said nothing more, but dvterainad in some way to make Jack change \ it, and can do it openly and above time to beco sentimental! Mr. know,” Jack answered the [deat there in him an@d | nelf-respect ju to do as Mr, Somers asked? 1 ay 1 his own initiative. But you wete where else for his tips. [ shall no mind and do as Mr. Gomera had asked, » All day I thought of our conversa jtion, of the money to our credit, ald of how much more we might have had but for Jack’s foolishness, as | called tt. As I have said, I had absolutely Bons mateernenol mae but it did not me te $6,000 with only if we could make $1,000 cay Tat ‘we might have made wit! . ; it would be to draw How fool! that out now, I thought, might make go much more it where it was, Then, how was, Who would know if he Somers, in confidence, what \of the different stocks? No, go on with our plans, {build the the house, {urge Ja thousand did it on Jack me—and the childre: must do this in.