The evening world. Newspaper, July 2, 1914, Page 16

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4 bes ‘I % Seah): min. d ‘4 ) {The E ven FASTABLISIED BY JOSEPH PULT Pedlides Daily Except Sura Company, Noa, te + by the Presa Pull ‘ark Kow, New Yorh in RALPH PULATZBE J. ANGUS SHAW JOSEPH PULITZER, ase M <1 ru a Entered at the Pow {Office at New York ax Reconl Class Melt it and @wscription Rates 1o The Evening} For bngland and World for the United States , ac Of, rear. ransie All Countries in the International . Postal Union. $2.50) One Tent... 201One Month NOBODY PROUD OF IT. OBODY in authority seems anxious to claim credit for the police raid on Bryant k in the early morning houre yesterday. Some N Vagrants. Ninety got off because they had money in their pocketd. Of 161 who were locked up, oll but one, a runaway boy, were discharged later in the day by Magistrate Campbell with the eympathy of the court, Not even a charge of habitual Joafing wae made against any prisoner. Police Commissioner Woods professed surprise at the way the agrests were made. Oommirsioner of Charitics Kingsbury hastened to express disapproval. Tt looks es if some departmental brain had worked out a labor- seving pian of arresting the public wholesale on the chance of finding 8 few pickpockets and bad characters in the round up. The method, towblatever ond devised, should be promptly discouraged. ‘A Mtle real work on the part of detectives could easily weed out the vdolous from those whose only crime is to have no home. And there are better ways to help the latter than to herd them into cells | and treat them like criminals. Whether the fine flower of laziness or overzed), the Bryant Park raid won ecant applause. <¢e-— Maybe Congressmen would get home sooner if they just did the work instead of sitting around and dreading it. ————_++. FAIR FOR ONE AND ALL. BERLIN, which has the best and most popular taxicab service in the world, taxicabs are operated chiefly by small, thrifty pro- prietors who own from three to fifteen cabs each. From time to time the city fixes the number of cabs to fit the growing needs of the public. So great is the demand for licenses that proprietors form associations and assign new permits, As much as $2,000 has been paid in Berlin for the right to operate a taxicab. Competitive taxicab service in New York must grow, if it is to) grow at all, along competitive lines. The city does not expect any monopoly, any extravagantly managed popular-priced taxicabs. As Commissioner of Licenses Bell told the president of the Yellow Taxicab Company yesterday, when the latter pleaded for higher fares on the ground that the present rates are confiscatory: ‘The people of the City of New York are not interested in ‘the overhead charges of the Yellow or any other taxicab com- pany. If you pay ten thousand dollar and other similarly high salaries you cannot expect to be able to compete with humbler concerns which obey the law and are making a fair profit out ‘of their businesses. $ +» The taxi rate established by this city is a fair rate for ‘each taxicab. It was not framed for the purpose of permitting G Any big combination to pay princely salaries and declare divi- ends at the expense of the people. ‘The taxioab is the vehicle of the man and woman of mod- qmate circumstances, Therefore its rates should be withir reason. Mfhet is the plain, common sense of the taxicab question as The ‘Bening World began to teach it to New York two years ago. : ‘Under the preecnt legal rates, hundreds of independent taxicab | __ ptoprietore ere making friends with the public and doubling their _ business. The Yellow Taxicab Company is confiscating its own prop- orty.~“Ite methods are obsolete. Its practices are outlawed, ot . He is a negative type--and, re- 7 Kédnapping is an ancient and world-wide practice, but the pipers te a the Positive type wie Best surviving schools seem to be in Italy. Don't be @ “leaner.” If you lack A confidence in yourself the aurest way += saa ir gain it is to practice self-reliance. ‘ry it out first in little things, then HOLIDAY MOTORING: MORE RECORDS, |!t "i come more easily to” you in OTOR vehicles killed twenty-nine persons in the city streets during June. Fourteen of the victims were children, The report of the National Highways Protective Society, fegpod: yesterday, lays special stress on two points: (1) Most of the fatalities occur Saturdays and Sundays, when un- Moensed owners are operating machines “for pleasure.” (2) Motorcycles are responsible for many holiday accidents, The State does not require the licensing of motorcycles. Therefore it i impossible to identify the owner, ‘That owning a car should give any reckless or inexperienced per- aon the right to drive it without a chauffeus's license is one of th anoxialies of automobile regulation, As for the motoreycle, the general public regards it as the most Little less dangerous than the automobile, it makes a thousand times as much Why in its present hideous state it unmitigated nuisance that ever appeared in the streets, noise and smells abominably. should be tolerated at all is another mystery. eS The navy is outwardly dry, To Gratitude Hunters, Po the Editor of The Evening World To the Editor of The Evening World ‘Who was the French general who, Was one great cause of N: Up one's seat In street car gay that no matter wha’ {Fo the Paitor of The Evening Wortd: I was born in the United States, A all is mot a citizen, AmIa ? ML who looks forward to especial than! remain silent and keep bin seat Bi le Stripes, 3 To the PAitor of The Evening World: on bas ten thousand dol- onited in banks at 4 per cent. L spend @ year for an equal Interest Problem. white stripes on a barber's po! n¢ 250 persons were piled into police patrols and | Fushed to Headquarters to explain why they were not criminals or | comperation to provide it with Regarding the question of giving T would he oceu- pation of a man may be be should not look for a reward by giving up hia seat, It is strictly a man's duty to give his seat to a lady; and any man for this kind of service had patter Kindly inform me what the red and mean, J. They are a relic of olden times were also surgeons. were gym . World Daily Can You | Straight From The Shoulder wr teas Mae: Youd even Warts The “* Leaner.” HERE 4s a certain type of young man who advances but little and for a very definite reason. Instead of fighting his own battles, making his own decisions, and mak- Ing use of his own reasoning powers, he “leans” on some one else. He relies not on his own brain, but upon another's, As @ result he falls to cultivate within himself the powers which make for advancement, the bigger things. Remember, when you lean on some one else, you lean backward. Don't lean back—walk—walk ahead. Walk on your own legs, Stand on your own feet. By constant atrophies. disuse self-reliance You can't better yourself by giving your powers over to some one else, And when they have atro- phied your chance for succe: ¢ hi withered and shrunk with them, This isn't theory—it's FACT. is fact illustrated by the careers of a million “leaners. Bo, if you're not advancing, watch yourself in the mirror of self-analysis, Bee if you're a “leanet Now is the It tagnant is Beat It? SIT Down SOHN. 1AM GETTING FAScINATED BY THE SEA ME was when the mother.” “People who those frazzled and untrue In by the personally-conduct time to square your shoulders and firmly plant your feot on your own round—now, before it has become 00 late Hits From Sharp Wit. ‘This !s dandy weather for fur coa: if you're a moth.—Philadelphia I quirer. e eee A man's position in the community ought to be directly commensurate with his honesty, says a writer, In that case, just think how many men would be taking off their hats to their dogs—Charleston News and Courter. ee Some children are so much better behaved in public than their parents, one {s not surprised their parents ob- ject to taking them about.—Cleveland Plain Dealer, oo. A man who fs always complaining cannot get attention when he has a real erlevance. If a man ts really misundoratood he has himeelf to blame for not mak- ing himself clear.—Albany Journal, . ee eee For things left unsaid an apology to Dever nevowsary, ° le} Constant purault of pleasure is more wearing ‘d work, her Most money » could save a lot of “abused” ing in a bathing suit, to be enough of her. Having We believe in the safe and sa glad we were well out of our boyhood before they pulled that same, sayings: A method; w Comrright, 1914, by The Press Publishing Co, (Te New York Evening World) YAM Seton urs SIT DowN FASCINATED MYSELF aqayl 1AM PERFECTLY HAPPY To SIT RIGHT HERE GETTING wife “rehabilitated” We've So Wags the World Bits of Common Sense Philosophy With a “Punch.” By Clarence L. Cullen. Copyright, 1914, by the Press Publich ing Co, (The New York Evening World), threatened to But she hn a better game than that now. to bring her mother home, Messalina ¢ Fourth, of course, Sin “go home The “willowy” woman makes a mighty poor show- Somehow there doesn’t seem If you want to study « variety of velled emotions, watch the fat matron who “doesn't care for seu bathing” sitting on the sand keeping her watch- fully waiting gaze on her good looking husband who is engaged in teaching a bunch of girls from “our hotel” how to swim in the surf, But we're might Why is it that the young woman at the summer resort hotel who doesn't have to be coaxed to sing never CAN honest-Injun sing? Ik about committing suicide never do it" is another of known just women who, more or less calmly, informed us that they were going to cash | and who made good, so to speak, eight men an It's extfaordinary how a man can ko on imagining that he's a sure-fire | and colossal hit with his wife for months and years after everybody else knows that she is wistfully waiting for him to be massage bone by a steamboat or something equally obliterative, Everyday Perplexities ——A Simple Manual of Etiquette Presa Publishio ests. must come home with | me and be my guest, You will give joy to me and 1 will do all in my power So wrote Shelley, and the sentiment certainly does him credit, but then we must remember that he lived long before the time when {tt was possible for automobile, parties to descend sudden- ly upon the unhapyy owner of a summer cottage and literally eat him Copyright, 1914, by the Entertaining Summer to honor you,” out of house and home. If one has a house within easy is rather ditt cult to strike the happy medium tween being overburdened with visi- considered mean use they have not boen asked, even for a day, during | it is better io run the risk of offending ome one than to make both yourself and your inviting house is meant to hol distance of town It tors or being many friends bi the entire season, | But guests miserable by than your In inviting summer guests th sible custom prevails nowadays of of, giving definite invitations for certain Gates and of etipulatmag just more Co, (The invitations make ™ If the hi has lines or trains. | house, The by devices. sen- | noon, * New York Evening long the visit ts to last, “Come jong as you feel like it,” us a good, long sent out to puzal as to how long he or sh | pected to stay, and hostess by 4 too 688 POSSOSNOS A Motor car horse and carriage she should send to meet her guests at the sta- tion or dock, but if her establishment boasts no such luxury and the guest never visited should write in her note of invita- tion full information regarding stage public ¢: In this case the guests should always pay for the transportation of themselves and their baggage to the most te successful when planning the entertainment of their guests, find that it nearly al- ways works out excellently to leave a part of each day open in which the sitors are to be left to their own For instance, if the morn- ing 1s to be given over to a motor trip, then let the guests read or loat or do as they please during the after- But unless the day has been very strenuous, somethin, ways be planned for the evening, be ever so stmole 4) nd stay i or "Come perhaps ngthy visitation, her before lages that hostess should a to her She threatens and Faustina and Lucrezia Borgia and THE Catherine of Russia, the “'Tain't-no-sich-thing” historians are now stak- ing Napoleon's Josephine to a coat of whitewash. cheap, the wife of Potiphar will be having her turn next, kalsomine is 80 on the wish- Such vague visit” are no the recipient is really ex. vex the she meet The Factory Girl and Her Chances Copytight, 1914, by The Prow (The New York Evening By Sophie Irene Loeb. scH as soon as th begin July 6. The commercial value The schoolgirl is the one sought. Mr. Fleischman, at the head of the pro- idea is to posed plan, says: y looking around for work. E Is launched to teach girls how to do things, so that | y start to work Board of Educa- tion Is co-operat- Increase a girl's to her employer. “The girls we are particularly anx- fous to enroll are those just out of grammar school and who will go to work in the fall or who are already They may Sy HELEN ROWLAND» Copyright, 1014, by the Press Pullish ing Go, (The New York Evening World) AST your bread upon the waters of a summer flirtation—but don’t ex- pect it to return ¢o you in the form of wedding-cake. J | Matrimony is a surgical operation by which a woman has her vanity | removed without an anaesthetic. ® | The flower of a man's love is not an immortelle, but a morning glory; which fades the moment the sun of a woman's «mile becomes too intense and slowing. Making a grass widow out of a green-eyed woman is carrying coals ¢ | Pennsylvania, | Why will a man marry an “original” woman for the sake of he brilliancy and then always proceed to take all the color out of her by tryin, to “tone her down” the dul! regulation pattern? Tt {s a waste of time to attempt to get a girl to take any vital Interes in the woman question until she has settled the man question one way a | another, | ames There may be men sufficiently broad-minded to concede that a womar 7 knows enough to vote, but there never was a married man who would con 4 cede that his wife's dresses fitted in the back. By the time a man has discovered that he is in love with a woman §! is usually so fagged out walting for the phenomenon that she Is ready te topple right over into his arms from sheer exhaustion, j — | Girls are the milk and honey which sweeten a man’s life; on | F { the caviare and wine wilich relieve {ts flatness and give it plquancy. | ¢ Old Fashioned Humor | 1.—GRANDFATHE JE TWISTERS. 2 Copyright, 1914, by the Prose ‘0, (The New York Evening Wort), \ AVE you a ttimble tongue? The bleak breeze blighted a | certatnty need one not to get all} DT}Et Broom bloasoma” i ; y repeating y several times 4 | tangled up in the alliterative} asix tittle thistle sie or “A notsy gems that grandfather delighted to] noise annoys spring on his friends. Some of them 4 Jim's gre lare guaranteed to tle knots in the N | ton@ue of the most careful speaker. Those of us who were children a quarter of a century or more axo of course remember “Peter Piper and his | peck of pickled peppers,” but this was Contietetively (Galy, and. niany 700 Us You but it sufficeth us.” shortest are the If you don't eve this just Mixed biscuits’ five or six Sas fast as you can, and if you succeed in this you may maet your mateh in “Troy boat," The alliterative js one too many were able to repeat Peter's adventures | for most tongues. ry saying over without once gettin ds twist and Ov gain “Six slender sap- There ar at it is much f lings” just os Hy as you can say difficult tly, A it and see if you don't get the words say that tt impossible to repeat the | following sentences fast: | “Flesh of freshly fried flying fish." | “A growing gleam glowing green.” | beautifully twiste If you do this pn you equal to k thistle sticks” or "Strict phen Stringer snared slicks kly silky snakes.” Chapters From a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond. The the Press Publishing Co, Copyright, 1914, by | | CHAPTER LI, OTHING was said about my New York Eve verwhelmed me with attentions and nthused over my babies, to my great delight, | going away until the ait-! “Really, Sue, you were always good \] ting was finished, |looking, but now you are positively handsome!" declared Gladys White “When will you come more, most intimate friend be- “again?” Mr, Howells asked, as he lald | fore | home. “L have been trying aside his brushes. to muke up my mind whether the “1am going away,” [ returned, "1]! ment is really in you, or if will let you know when | retur: thes, 1 guess," I answeredy for an employer} “Going away? Not for long 1{jausghing, Odd, the disgruntlement shown by a fat man er they can make| ope?” he responded. There it was againt Recause m: when his wife's shoe lace becomes untied and he's . ‘ from $1 to $8 a| “About a month, I expect. T am hea were well made and yl asked to stoop and tie it, compared with the alacrity week instead of | S0!ns to visit. my mother,” £ ex- |) H 0d hot taken fae ide Vee ooking with which he sprawls around to tle some other pad of | plained. gowns, fearing mother would thinks woman's shoe lace $3 or $4. The He looked disappointed, but said nothing further, excepting to ex- press the wish that 1 might have a ine extravagant, although L would have dearly loved to show them off at home, “Ww still have Mart Ld ing with the Edu-| peasant visit and come back pre- PST AA Neal aaa cational Alliance| pared to give him as much time as sho is impossible!” 1 ame at East Broad- | posible. claimed. "When T get home Tl sen way and Joffer-| «1 never saw Mr. Howells so put/3)u #7e Pallerns, an clive son street, and] out!’ Mrs. Somers said. I was get-|1 had your money, Gladys (her fat! the classes will] ting into the car, so didn't see her|was the richest man in town), I'd show you how to dress.” Mother had not questioned met that is, not disagreeably, Yet Twas sure she sensed and disapproved of much that [ had done, “Your clothes must have cost you a good deal, daughter,” she said one day when T was putting on one of ists I had bought at Madame , and which was not yet face, but from the tone of her voice 1 knew she was “put out" too, Again I asked myself the question: “Why was she so intimately interested in all that I did?" . ‘The next two days | was very busy, and as Jack kissed me goodby on the train I was so tired | forgot the thou- sand-and-one things. | ate cee te . It was almost the first time PA! jl OY pea nese separated, and I felt a More than they used to, yes,” T ; ed | Admitted, “but you know Jack Himp Fieteg: 8 thy throat as T looked} another raise, and has made al Lorair paid for + ‘onsiderable mo know a little of arithmetic, botany! “Don't get sick, Jack,” I said, tear-]Considenible, money outside of bis dd) and other subjects they have studied | ful ie danger, Sue. Somers was in "1 im very glad! Jack ia a hard- |in school, but when they go into the] ...teraay and asked me to have an-) working | fellow.” | mother sald i 7 y im he'd | thoughtfully, “and deserves to @uc- factories they will have to learn) other game of golf. 1 told him hed) ome vu help him ail that spociulized work (which will take two | better come down to the club. The ire ce sie! Your waist ia. vert or three years) at an exceedingly | links are patter ali night, you. know, becoming, and you look very pretty low salary. and go into town in the morning.” [in It, and) in’ your other | stylish “We hope to give our girls in six] “What did he say?" 1 asked, Inter-/<l0thes, ut volun new house will weeks of instruction an experience EAE was a good idea. He}than you have figured. TI almost and ability equivalent to many) 14 We would motor out, then motor) Wish Jack had employed a good archt- months of actual employment in 8) fy in the morning.’ tect, You would then have known factory.” Just then the whistle blew, the etly how much it was going to, : Vain (0 “ALL aboard!” and | cost." Good busin Here ina: ehance Prarenge oot sppaaay left mo. “Oh, Jack wouldn't hear of having” for you, my dear, who must needs/°8%0) Wi vod disposed Norah and|/an arehitect, mothe He said ‘it was earn @ livelihood, When you know] tne children comfortably 1 leaned /a Waste of man And, really, | scmething well you are in DEMAND.| back against the | soat Bee eer in VeEy RaCinlalen Vary coven Ther b urses of needle-| my eyes. our . : d looks nice and si wen iMilinery and ail sorts of ems|I kept thinking of tho Gisappolnts [ent And looks nico and stylish as ployment in whicn heretofore girls| ment in Mrs. Somers's voice wien | have had to start at the bottom of| told her I was going aay) Bus tine heard of ae stylish the ladder, with very little pay, until Immediate ayes ON A Sine Houane Rett dlRataaranll 2A ey have “learned how.” hand that ay Bol : Rinsinaae Di shes (Mere is an opportunity to get the| There probably was no connection | th ee Morice comtory 00: tion in a few weeks, and a| between the two circumstances, but) style joum ni thai ‘ salary awaits you at the end|1 dimly saw that If Jack persisted in. fe i of that, mother, It Is most of The erying need of the hour| his determination not to tell Mr] comfortuble, snd you should | see is EFFICIENCY, Weners what. he wished to know]your room! ‘Mother's room,’ Jack When you can be depended upon| about the stock market we should jcally it. 7 really betteve he’ thinks to do a thing well, no matter how| ose their friendship. A sport time more of you than he does of his own menial the thing may be, you have] ago that would hay alam-|mother, He Was xo Interested. to an asset that no one can take away| jty, but now I w: Indif-\have it bright and s It has a from you. Such knowledge is the] ferent, big bow window, and it is next to kreateat power in the world, espe-| Mother was so glad to xee us, sol the bathroom, He says you are ‘to cially for the worker, delighted with little Emelie, whom,come and stay with us whenever you Of course, you need recreation af-| she thought had grown very much,| will, that your réom will be walt ter your hard school studies. But) and with the baby, whom she had ling’ with some forethought you can still] never seen, that for a time T forgot ja a good boy. See that you wedge in a little play during process of learning, ing that you will find later on, was eertainly evidenced when cational systems in this A six weeks’ sacrifice is certainly worth the sav- This great need of “knowing how" e Mayor of the great city of New York took the time to visit other cities with the view of incorporating vo- the publi ecKnd ta Ine with this (dea Guring Hittle worrles 1) omight have} de all you can to keep him unspoiled, ad in the delight of being daughter.” at home again, My girlhood friends (TO BE CONTINUED.) i! 1 the summer the wise girl who must) in the direction of nigher wages, the look forward to work micht well seek solution to the present situation He the opportunity of learning to dojin “learning how," so that the eme soramthing | that would re ner ploye NEPHGEN OG and cannot c| enough EX CE, that sl have “INEFRICLENC 8 his con: ‘need not work for the io eat wages.|atant excuse for the low there are various movementa veloma | Lad Py

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