The evening world. Newspaper, July 8, 1914, Page 14

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eve eS, ation. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. i Publishing Company, Nos. 63 te _ Pudlidhed Daily Except Sunday by #, Frese Bu pa , All Countries in the International Postal Union. 0) One Year. 09.78 3010ne Mont VOLUME 55.....ccecccecssecseececssecseeesses NO, 19,814 GO STRAIGHT TO THE GOAL. HE Evening World's long fight to secure cheaper tolls for tele- phone users in Greater New York pushed atill nearer to victory yesterday when the engineer of the up-State Public Service Commission and « special committee of the New York Tele- Phone Compsny got together to begin work on the valuation of tele- | phone property in this city. rr The efforts of this newspaper, backed by friends of fair telephone Fates who came to its support in Albany and elsewhere, have resulted in a dual investigation. The Telephone Company’s experts will pre- ‘pate one appraisal. The State’s engineers will undertake another. | The two eets of investigators will not work together, but both will f cubmit their findings to the Public Service Commission, which will , ultimately fix the new rates. 7 If the New York Telephone Company has at last made up its mind to edmit the rights of the public and do the square thing by fits eubscribers, it can eave itself and the State much time and _ @mpense. Up to the present moment, however, its proffered “co- | operation” ‘has cloaked delay, “harmony” has been a veil for ob- steaction. It is, therefore, the epecial duty of the Public Service Commis- fon to maintain the utmost vigilance to the end that the investigation i hall move ewift and straight to its goal: Prompt relief for telephone ‘A Beers in this city. y The Public Service Commission must watch the New York Telephone Company. The public will watch both—fully convinced that s five-cent phone for all New York can be a reality before an- other year. —_+-4-—_.—. » Massachusetts can have George Fred again—sooner than It hoped, maybe. ' ose NOW IS THE TIME. AMMANY has done itself no good by trying to pelt Mayor Mitchel’s administration with “the snows of yester-year.” Whatever graft and waste there may have been in contracting _ and carting methods last winter were after all mainly heritages from the old ante-Fusiow era when Tammany still did things in its own cherished ways. Yet, inadvertently, Tammany has done the city a real service by bringing up the question of snow removal just when easy-going New Work was quite ready to forge®it until the next time it found its etreet cars stuck in a snow bank. F Commissioner Fetherston gets an opportunity to repeat again that our street cleaning methods are seventeen years out of date; that while 56 cents per cubic yard is too high for getting rid of @now, contractore have a way of defaulting on their contracts, and that in short there is a dire need of new methods, - Maybe if somebody perspires a little over the snow problem * @uring the summer this village can be spared a painful repetition of ite half-frozen flounderings last February. —————— Z It looks as if the Federal Reserve Board might have to “e forget ite middle name and beg for members. <4 -—______ A HINT FROM NEW YORK. ‘ARIS is reclaiming its public parks for the children of the poor. ‘The Municipal Council has decided to close the huge ‘ Jardin de Paris, a famous’ open-air music hall in the Champs (lysees, on the ground that it is a flagrant encroachment on the public gardens. , _Avcording to a cable despatch in the Sun, the authorities report that in some of the parks “it is impossible to walk a hundred yards without striking a palatial restaurant and Babylonian gardens guarded ~ My men in gold braided liveries who admit only wealthy people, while children of the poor are compelled to flee to the asphalted boule- yaed for fresh sir.” » Maybe Paris caught a reminder from New York, where the play- \ + ground campaign conducted by The Evening World since early spring 4 has developed into one of the city’s chief interests this summer. Cy Paris has always believed that the more beautiful it made itself, the more sunlit spaces, »gneen grass and flowers it provided for its fee ’ children, the more deeply its citizens, generation after generation, ie would learn to love it. Results have amply proved its wisdom. No |) dity'in the world is 80 adored by people young and old who call it , + home. Even its passion for luxury, for gorgeous ope Be Yants and exclusive inclosures is promptly checked w to interfere with the children. - New York will make no mistake in saturating itself with the dame spirit. air restau- hen these things ———34 -____. The only liberty I mean {s a liberty connected with order; that not only exists along with order and virtue, but which cannot exist at all without them,— Edmund Burke, died July 8, 1797. “mae alth. Now I suppose the | Is are contemplating com- pelling druggists to live over thoir a | stores, to have night bell of one of our universiti mila and Roles | head sities |leading from their apartments te the fe Beading my 80 to college 884 |store to slide down on. Don't worl y think that the Society for the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Animals should | | take all the druggists out in our sub- fo the Kaitor of The Kreaing World: I recently bad an interview with Evenin ¢ World Daily Magazine: Wednesday? - Te LATEST PicTURES ON. SKIRTLET Why Not? & Coprrige, ty The Prew Publishing Oe. (The New York Brening World) 1014, Bn MANICURE By Maurice Ketten ly 8: Copsright. 114, by 't Praia New York oe UT, Clara, I'd juat love to go, but it's the girl's afternoon out, and”— “And of course you won't go with me!” cried that now lachrymose young matron, Clara Mudridge Smith, breaking in upon Mrs, Jarr’s reluctant excuses, “Nobody loves me! Nobody cares for me! 1 wanta die!” And she took out her gold vanity box from her gold mesh bag and started to repair her complexion while yet her tears were flowing. getting late in the afternoon,” Mra, Jarr continued, soothingly. “Really, I think {t's too late to go to a fortune teller's to-day. And, per- haps, your husband will be sorry he has treated you with coldness"—— “He'd better be sorry!” flared the weeping young society leader of Har- lem! ‘He'd better be sorry. He has broken my heart, and if he were to beg for forgiveness on his bended Kknees—only he has rheumatism #0 bad his knees won't bend—but he Hits From Stam Wits. Time never hangs heavy on the hands of a boy with his first watch. ji of Why should a woman use & hammer to drive a tack if there is a hairbrush handy ?—Omaha World-Herald. * 8 6 No man ever becomes so good that he doesn’t need a carbolized bath and clean garments after he makes a ruy for office.—Houston Daily Post. oe @ The poor old parents are getting scant mercy at the hands of the re- formers who think they know all about bringing up boys and girls.— Milwaukee Sentinel, ° A oF YouR. DOG erably ? doesn't cife, because you do not need to bend the knees much dancing tho modern dances, id, anyway, he has dancing crutches—but he has cruel, cruel!" “But why go to a fortune teller?” asked Mra. Jarr. “Although I do hear that Mme. Zingara tells you the most wonderful fortunes for a dollar, pee two dollars she predicts good pokes “But I want to know why my hus- band’s love has turned cold to me,” sobbed Mra. Mudridge-Smith. “And I think it real selfish of you, Mra. Jarr, that you won't chaperon me to either Zareff the Occult or Agrip- pina the Inscrutable!” “If you wish to go downtown don’t mind me, poke up Mr. Jarr. “Tho children are over at old Mrs. Dus- onberry's, and as the old lady is making cookies for them, they'll not want any supper except some milk. And I could manage for myself, and you can have tea somewhere, after flirtation or optimism. A girl may not be exactly sure of like one. as he loves himself. been | rid, WEL! AAAABAABAIBIAS ANIA ALAAAAASAIAAA AAS Mr. Jarr Learns a New Language! He Learns It All in One Lesson. RARER PPR REP PPR PPP RRP ee fort tune tellers!” Then, as he let Mrs. Jarr and Mrs. | , Mudridge-Smith out and saw them down the stairs and safely on their way to consult the necromancers, Mr. Jarr whistled, And that wretch Dink- ston came softly down from an up- per flight of stairs, where he had clear. ked Mr. loitered until the coast “Where are they going Dinkston, “Old Man Smith got up enough courage to give his bride a bawling- shut off the financial backing. Anyway she out about something, or else he’ can't understand it; and to consult a fortune telle: “What bookstore is asked Mr. what constitutes an “ideal man’ Sometimes you find a woman who loves her husband almost as much This is the time of year when a chary bachelor crosses his fingers and says “Bread and butter” three times, before venturing alone and unpro- tected into the moonlight with a pretty woman. Making a bridegroom out of a bachelor may be a feat of skill, in these days; but making a husband out of a mere man is one of the eternal fine arts. Dinkston eagerly. N ROWLAND. Copyright, 1914, by the Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Pr aination. A man's natural reaction, after too much wine, love, food, but almost any man surrounded by a sixty-horse-power automobile looks just through shopping”—— |“When a bookie gives her the once- been standing in the He.knew Mrs. Clara Mud- t going shopping, rds explained, “If the could take any money away from her, hurrah for the for- over, and her wearing all tho: fd ards, he'll sure believe he’ ‘ eet tea good Thirty-eight and he'll sting her ‘or @ grand at least.’ “What kind of chatter 1s that?” asked Mr. Jarr. “Are you making it UP a8 you go along Me?" asked Dinkston in surprise. fo, but in the course of an eventful career I have been a d - foe” ane ons lealer in desti. cant term for a fortune teller's office or studi A ‘bookie’ is a fortune teller—y; 1 kn c bee do iow there are race or bookmakers, too." " and ‘Thirty-eighte’ iked Mr. Jarr. replied ‘a ‘Thirty-eight’ Na a client—a ~ victim, A @ thousand dollars. And, a’ is @ hundred “I didn't know it was y game. Let's follow. the women sie and warn them.” satd Mr. Jarr “Don't worry,” said Mr. Din “the ‘bookies’ don't work gern sure. Besides, the ladi m That 19 what they. c cent card reader or palate (ty ‘ t doesn't graft the ‘thirtycelghts, "ne > _—_ Jungle Tales for Children By Farmer Smith, pt. . Conroe Your RS. HIPPO was seated on the river bank with Harry Hippo by her side. Suddenly it began to rain and Harry sald: “Mother, dear, it's raining and I w: to get in the water out of the Pree Publighing ( ening Worla tO “My dear,’ began Mrs. Hippo, “don't you know that the water is wet, too?” “Of course, i wet, mother, but I close my eyes when I am in the rand I don't want to shut my the trees and beautiful sk: Harry went down in. the water and did not come up for @ long time. When his eyes came above the water it was raining hard and his mother asked him: “Why do you come to the top of the water when it is rainin, “Because I want to get eyes when I am out here looking at, ~ Copsrigitt, 1014, by ‘The Prem Publish looking wom&un—a woman almost as famous—as was himself. had sneeringly described her as nearly such a bore as I expeeted. Seeking the exit, she turned to find the Italian. ‘| was her first love and her last. The man introduced himself as leave from her to call at her hotel. seven years younger than she. Margaret at first refused to listen to she should marry. mind can compare with my own.") thetr little son was born. in the patriot ranks. At last Rome was captured. passengers besides themselves. |The captain and many others died. At last, on July 29, 1850, Tragedy sloping decks. and Mystery. them swept into the water, wedded lovers were never recovered. Evening World HE real entrance to Yellowstone Park, on the north, Is Livings- ton, From there to Gardiner the train winds between lofty moun- tains touched with snow. By its side rushes the turbulent Yellowstone River. At the official entrance Is the huge lava gateway bearing the tn- scription “For the Benefit and En- joyment of the People,” and within, indescribable wonders. On all sides are the mountains. On one high craig an eagle has built hia nest and appears, with almost suspicious certainty, to welcome the tourists. In one valley is the house of a Chinaman who for seventeon years has grown a small truck gar- den, presumably to supply the hotels with fresh vegetables. | Comparing the size of the garden with the size only spoke of one hotel, that seems hardly pos- language of the cult. Let me explain. | sible. A bookstore,’ or a ‘library,’ is the| Up and up and then a marvellous mountain of white and golden ter- races, the mammoth hot springs guard- ing them is in a thimble shaped rock The Love Stories Of Great Americans By Albert Payson Terhune NO.17—MARGARET FULLER AND HER ITALIAN MARQUIS. HROUGH « Roman art gallery one day in 1847 rambled an odd- eccentricities were as well known throughout Americe—end But in Italy her looks and manne: And nudges from all except one of the art-gallery loungers. The woman was Margaret Fuller, genius, reformer, world celebrity, who had written immortal works and whose crusades of mercy had bettered the conditions of hospitals, asylums and prisons here at home. But her resistance was as brief as it was futile. and Ossoli were married. The ceremony was kept secret. reach her family at home. with such American celebrities as Hawthorne, Emerson and Greeley. her marriage was not mentioned in her letters to them. It was a voyage of horrdr, culminating in supreme tragedy. Soon after they set sail an epidemic of small-pox scourged the ship. and buffeted mercilessly by head winds. That night a heavy sea was running. the island, and at once the waves rushed over her By valiant rescue work the lives of nearly all on board were saved, But when the danger was over Ossoli and their son had vanished. None had seen None could guess how it had happened. Next day the child was found on the beach—dead. But <he bodies of the ing Co, (The New York Evening World), whose face and queer costumes and the President of the United States ms provoked covert grins Carlyle itrange, lilting, lean old maid, but not Scarcely the type of woman to figure, as she did, in a romance worthy of old-time Bowery melodrama. As Miss Fuller wandered through the art gallery, she lost her way. a slender, dark-eyed Italian staring at her in frank adoration. Catching her eye, the man stepped forward and asked if he might have the honor of showing her through the picture rooms. Prim New England ty-seven years old at th he was—and thir- ‘uller did not rebuff She who had shunned men except as intellectual comrades fell in love almost at once with this stranger, Its the "Marquis Ossoll,” and obtained He was almost penniless, and he was Yet theirs was a sudden and perfect love. Ossoli’s proposals, as she had vowed her life to reforms, and as she feared her friends would laugh at her if (She had boasted: “I have yet to meet a man whose In December, 1847, she * No hint of it She was in close correspondence Yet For two years the couple lived together clandestinely, in Rome, There Then came the Italian revolution. Ossoll fought. During the siege of Rome Margaret was a veritable |angel of mercy in the hospitals and the trenches, her young husband's side in battle and in sortie. She stood fearlessly at ‘caret and Ossoll and their child fled for th@r lives, for the city’s defenders expected scant .aercy from the victors, To the Abruzzi Mountains the trio fled. Thence, after many hardships and perilous adventures, they made their way to Leghorn. still morbidly dreading the ridicule of her friends at home) they boarded @ merchant bark, the Elizabeth, bound for New York. There were few There (Margaret The Elizabeth was swept by gales One misfortune followed another. hort-handed and battered, the ship sighted Fire Island. This was The Elizabeth ran aground off Margaret and Travelogues— Yellowstone National Park Coppright, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), known as Liberty Cap. Hach terrace has a name—Hyman, Minerva, Angel and, greatest of all, Jupiter. Where the water still runs over the rocks they are every shade of yel- low from cream to golden brown, while the dry portions are a chalk white, From the pools rise clouds of steam, filling the air with sulphur fumes, and the shifting breezes, now blowing the vapor directly at you and now away to the valley, reveal water of a deeper blue than the bluest of June skies. Still higher and the gorge beside you 1s filled with a grotesque mass of gray rocks appropriately named the “Hoodoos.” Everything in the Park @ is either gray or yellow, and so the next marvel is the Golden Gate. And no less a wonder, though wrought by human hands, the road which passes through it and hangs over the brink of the falls and canon of the Gardiner River, Only a nine-mile drive to the first camp, but it leaves you breathless with wonder and quite ready for @ night's sleep. 4 (To Be Continued.) \ The May Manton Fashions VERYTHING that gives the effect of a guimpe is fashionable. The fea- ture unquestionably will remain an impor- tant one during the, coming season. Illus- trated is a charming frock adapted to small women as well as ty young girls, and sug- ge ue pressnee ot mpe, alt! the bodice is a ene Piece, It includes also the new flared flounce at the lower edge, and it can be made with ort or long sleeves v to afternoon w College and Schoo! girl Preparing for thelr r turn to alma ma will be especially in. terested in the design, for it Is exceedingly good for their use, As shown » the ma. terials are taffeta and per a one view, flow. crepe a. 0 the other, ne pins ‘or the sixteen. size the dress will ree quire 6 yds. of material In. wide, 3% yd sleeves and full chem- isette. The widen of the skirt at the lower The best recipe f 1 be: rT edge is 2 yds. and 19 or preserving a woman's beauty is a combination of| Mrs. Hippo went to the a. marines and sink them to prey s 8 ie best recipe . ey ; further torture?” He smiled and the! When a man gives his seat in the| mental sclence, massage cream and masculine devotion, climbed up the bank and sat down. | pattern No, 8834—Drese With Guimpe Effect for cut in gute reg interview ended D Tew tnia euiee ha doses taninubae —— Harry came along attar her although Misses and Small Women, Sixte teen and eighteen > @ & smal) 7 jords, jing her look as if she would have A man regards a woman's love as a woman regards a bank account; he| “Don't you know, Harry,” she be- Eighteen Yea years, work there from 8 A. M, to 11.30 P. bitten him had he not made the sac- We z= and only yesterday I was fined $50 permitting my wife to sell fiv gents’ worth of lodine while I wi - 4 . é gan softly, “if It were not for the rain never fancies {t is possible for him to overdraw his balance, there would not be water In the river? You must learn to be contented with Readers, to settle a lot of unnec- essary trouble between landlords and tenants in reference to women in t | rifice.-Toledo Blade, Cali at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION ee BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppo- man h my dinner down. Many 4 ost his own health Certainly women should be permitted to do the proposing; but alas! what corey to you.” te te Gimbel Bros.), corner Siath avenue and Thirty-second street, this “ot wanitersmeoring their little jby drinking to that of another man, |the average man will forgive a girl sooner for asking him to steal for her| aque no Gay enough Fain Up tothe | § omaie gNew Toth oF tens DE a 58) FONDS SE Yom 'sORtS 8: On on breath of fresh alr: Do landiords! yfany a man bas lost a good thing | °F “Me for her, than for asking him to love her. ORY SHO AIL OB 8 Clouds nent eee TMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always apectty Me i e fave the right to chase ehitdvent | for the simple reason that he failed : ig ‘mouth over toward Harry and|$ Peteree Suze wanted, Add two cents for letter postage if in « hurry, eo them? «HARLEM. | to bold bis tongue.—Macon Telegraph. Marriage: The mongtgnous interval between love and divorce, ua... i . . ek

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