The evening world. Newspaper, July 11, 1914, Page 8

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Siiiasa ban sRSTABLISHIND BY JOSEPH PULITZER wa he biiahing Company, Nos. y Brcent MELT fee. "New Fare ne Con? W, tiered Park Rowe oi ER. Irae Secretary, © Park Row, THATS Sone at the Post-Oftice at New Tork as Becond—Class Satter, COOKING Rates to The Evening| For England and the Continent and World for the United States All Countries in the International and Canada. Postal Union. b J Yoar...... + $2.90] One Tear...c.ees + 99. ‘Menth. . .801One Month oa senseccccecccecees NO, 19,817 WHO'S AFRAID? HE railroads report that 10,000 idle freight care went into service in the two weeks following June 1. To move the biggest wheat crop in the history of the country tens of _ thonsands more will soon be rolling. During the past twelve months | , the operating revenues of the railroads have increased in greater ratio than their expenses. President Wilson has the word of Henry Ford that business in @fl industries is “reassured” and that if men who are crying “wolf” ‘ will only desist and get down to work their mental state will change ‘g like magic. o: Out in Kansas people are buying automobiles so fast that the ‘o- Becretary of State figures 1918 will see an average of one motor car re ‘for every family of five. Rep: Unele Sem is banking $13,000,000 checks on battleship deals «Gnd the Clearing House in this city reports the biggest Sub-Tressury balance on record. Who's afraid? —_-++-—__—_. ‘The trouble with the prisoners on Blackwell's Island seems 4 to be too much of what the French call esprit de corps. It can be epared in a penitentiary, ee A NEW VERSION. i : URELY the world must be growing better when the poor inventor t no longer fights off poverty while rich men reap millions from the product of his brain. ‘A modest young leather worker invented a way to write things on « kodak film at the time the picture is taken. He has just re- @vived a check for $300,000 from a big camera concern which bought the device outright. The inventor can, therefore, say: “I am inde- aera and what is more I shall never have to worry for a minute the future about the manufacturing problem of that invention.” , The first draft he will make on his bank account will be to take aa ‘hie mother on a trip to Europe for the rest of the summer. Who Dy ° Gaye inventors are rewarded only in story books? eS “An honest-faced man,” Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch called Mr. Charles Francis Murphy after bearding him in his lair. What does the tiger think the lady meant? ep DRINK STATISTICS. JIGURES showing an increase since 1904 of three gallons per capita in the nation’s consumption of alcoholic drinks need 8 foot note. While the average consumption for 1913 was 22.68, the average $m 1907 and again in 1911 was 22.79. This gives the prohibitionists a fair argument for the success of their labors in at least preventing an increase. What is more, the actual consumers of alcohol are estimated to be about 25.5 per cent. of the total population, with an average of eighty-nine gallons each. Of this 25.5 per cent. it would be interest- fag to know what proportion do the heavy drinking. If bard drinkers drink more but grow fewer, while the number of those who drink little or nothing keeps fairly steady, totals and Lk. IK averages need not depress us. ROvg Se Covent ts Vere rena Weakest Not @ single case of overcrowding of a steamboat anywhere 66 E was the most wonderful im the United States on July 4 last has been reported to the man! He never saw us be- Federal Steamboat Inspection Service at Washington.—News fore and yet he held a folded item. bit of paper to his forehead and read ‘The great thing about safety and sanity is thet you can't Sars Mucrage ae ene bipd keep them from spreading. out!” exclaim irs. Jarr * oe came bursting into the dining-room al ac oaimpanmmmtale all excited after her visit to Zareft he Occult. WILL THEY IMPROVE IT? Sr. Michael Angelo Dinkston, who Mr. J in the Toe ae of New Yorkers who turn a proud and admiring Taleprcon, dalea want ae could gaze on the Public Library every time they pass it will be ee seen ae eer yee Le) know that no more scaffoldings need mar that superb facade. psychics,” Mrs. Jarr ee ae 8 Little has been published concerning the marble figures still to|¢4 what Clara Mu SS «be placed in the empty epaces. Photographs of these statues, the ara ~~ pe iris wes a a models of which are soon to be shipped to the United States from | ried to a rich old man who had grown » the Paris studio of Sculptor Paul Wayland Bartlett, will be shown in nd woulda't give her any Whe Sunday World Magazine to-morrow. Ber We HAVE THe Best COOK In THE U.S. NOW LITTLE WIFEY Wit COOK ONLY FOR HER DEAR LITTLE HUBBY matter by what strange powers they use to do it, at least give good ad- said she, ang she gave @ near- baleful glance to Mr. Jarr which clear- ly asked: “Are you going to have that man stay to supper?” “Did the ‘bookie’— Chapters From a Woman’s Lif By Dale Drummond Coprright, 1914. by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Black Art, he knew stronger power who di mean the for-|asked Mr. Dinkston. CHAPTER LIV. WAS aghast! about $3,200 when I left, and Jack had written that he half made $5,000. What could it mean? I turned to him for an explanation. “Don't look at me like that, Bue, I haven't ewallowed the money!” “But where hag it gone?” I asked. “% told you I had given the men : $3,800, Your expenses were $100, and Dee glad to see the last detail completed, the last niche filled and “And Zareff told us we were both|I sent you e check for $200. My ex- penees and some bille—never mind indifferently, “were $200 more, Then I took @ flyer one day and lost It's gone, so don't talk Mildred Somers and he seemed annoyed what about $1,500, about it!” “I don't gee what you want to take Wasn't it wonderful?” | ‘qyers,’ ae you call them, for! w else would he have sized her! would let things that you know noth- Mrs. Jarr tune teller—say he could not give ‘the death thought;’ but if Mrs. Smith wished ‘the death thought’ on anybody, might prove quite expensive,” she thinks money is but dross that world- laughed. iMngs et When Jack came home I told him, ‘Well, Dinkston says they are all “Pity she couldn't let you get your asked, astonished at bis manner, “I though you liked her? You sald tle came over last nigh' “That's different You've known them longer, and been more intimate with them! I could have told him differently. If borrowing money was a sign of intimacy, then mine had been more with Mildred Somers than any other woman I knew. “I thought Gertie looked worried. And isn’t she thinnor?" Jack asked. “You know I haven't seen her eince you went away.” “She didn't look well,” I ant thinking of the lavalliere as the pos- | Love You! Your coorcing 1S DIVINE! BE MY LITTLE Ooprright, 1014, by The Pras Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World), HE {6 not good—ehe is not vile— The Woman with the Serpent's Smile— But oh! how full of artful guile, Of subtle trick and gentle wile! Not hers to chatter, chaff and chin, But just to eit and sweetly GRIN— And by that smile to rope them in! Most of a man’s thoughts about his wife are after-thoughts. A man will go to all sorts of trouble to catch a fish that he doesn’t ; want, just in order to prove that he can; but, somehow, he never can com- prehend why a woman will go to the same lengths in order to fascinate @ man that she doesn’t want for the same reason. When a summer man tells you he’s “sorry,” dearie, he doesn’t mesa | that he’s sorry he tried to kiss you, but that he’s sorry he didn’t succeed. The average man’s love is fearfully and wonderfully made A woman's reverence for the mighty masculine intellect is apt to decline after she has been married to one for a few months and has dis covered that all this “worry over business” is merely worry for fear he may not be able to get away from it in time for the baseball game. In these of mental-mating how is a man going to recognise bis psychic affinity By the “vibrations” when every pretty girl he meets causes | him the same eentimental vibrations, more or less? Marriage turns @ man’s and woman's character inside out—and the danger lies in that they are so apt to forget which is the right elde. . It takes two to make a flirtation, but three to make {t interesting. Getting Acquainted. By Elsa Crosby. Coprright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), BK any well-posted| timate personal friends hear about member, of the| What an odd and unusual incidenty drew them together, they credit it all’ “How They Met/ to lovers’ luck, which indeed it ts. Committee” ofthe} Many an ambitious young man of Mothers’ Ald So-| £004 principles and fine savings bank 4 : interest, who is only two counters clety and she will] away from the head of the depart- tell you that the girl doesn't live who tp not the very {deal some worthy blue serge delegate) minnac wives bee had bie fates from the National Bachelors’ Asso-| blushing bride thrown into his arms elation has been looking for ever since | Just south of Fourteenth Gye 4 the delegate and the ideal together. es ‘Who told you?” cried Mre Jarr he tell Mrs. Mudridge-Smith although he would have no part in| that he could make the luck currents psychic of|run toward her in mont h things?’"| only he could ‘ book, and if she had no bankbook he magnetise for her eo it would double and treble?” again “Why, yes, bi an; ston. jut he ee tak would be no fee,” replied Mra. Jerr. “So, as Clara Mudridge-Smith sald to me when we came away, ‘You see “I should think a broker’s planning | Zareff is a mystic, who, as be ‘3, d been with me, crooks and you'd better let him know just what this fake is trying to do, “ polisher. ‘Bm: ber husband's gold to counselled Mr, ‘him any o} nothing like that when vic and Ger- | “Oh, that’s all I can remeu ber hat t did he say that was not questioned Mr, Dinks' phone and he us alistic words,” replied Mre, J was evidently speaking to a devotee on a higher plane of psychiatry, His ber them distinctly, 80 not akirt dicks, There hasn't been a Three in aight. Barberpole is Cam- In cases where one happens to live, \say, in Bay Ridge, Bayonne or Bay- \elde, and the other in East Fifty, Sixty or Seventy something, or may- hap somewhere in the hundreds up on the west side, fate and chance have got to do team work with op- portunity and Cupid to single them out of the crowd and get them under the same parasol or in the same ice- cream parlor so that matters can Proceed in the customary way toward the orange blossom counter, In some instances whole years and lots of trolley cars go by before the right time co. es; then, when the in- 66 HAT'S all this opposition in the Senate to the appoint- ment of Paul Warburg to the Federal Re- serve Board?” asked the head “Rube atuff,"* replied the laun- naturally domin- | |eatin’ terbacker and red suspenders. me that fortune t are ay finished and judge whether additions are to add or detract from the | all fakire and swindlers.” sisi y+» fine architectural Jines which make this in its present state one of the pre beietul * tenon ast ol 00d most satisfying of modern buildings. —_— aH The city will be thankful when it can see the library front ed Mr. Jarr. “And Dinkston|ing about alone, and stick to the any opinions. Sen ‘sons who, no fe hasn't been worth livin: ' | Letters From the People pcialimitaaldaaedasilbe te tine ti ny ye ira Bale broken his spirit preparing himself for positions no one has ever thought teller with a ry as great as that/, « ighbor” of an apprentice bricklayer. It used |“cjose” neighbo: to be the custom to have detectives quir! Mred to watch a bank clerk and see sometimes a very ton for a young man. It teaches bim is poneines s Tey shaking dice with a druggist for @|that he has fulfill all of the re- suspicion, and special direotors’ ee meeting was called. If he bought a @ bank and ending up as a president is one of the most inspiring pictures ever painted by a cocaine @rtist. The training for the banker! @tarte early. First, you catch a boy age Nowadays these precauti: it is popular for the old ones to hot taken, Since” the cost “ot | tengo.—Norfolk Ledger-Dispetch. living has go ian tionary there {s no place a your words that talk doesn’t seem clerk can spend his leisure time cheap.—Commercial Appeal. cept at home in bed. I hink the best o ¢ 8 opening for a young man in @ bank| When we wee flor whom wealth has no charms and tell him what a great chance he has be cashier in fifty years. At the @n4 of each week the boy is insulted he probably will never have any|to keep from wopderi: what she money, DISGUSTED. | thinks of it, anyway.—Toledo Blade. in the World Aluause, ‘Be the Editor of The Evening World: temporart and others that might have had “Cut it out, Bue! It doesn’t look wives will wheo the unprosperous! very well for you to find fault with friends of their husbands dare venture| me. Wasn't it your nagging that Dinkaston better do something| so Til quit ri for his own fortunes before he say8! never touch the blamed thing again! how would we furnish I had firmly decided it : i Quit! Wi Hits From Sharp Wits. |e soure + | must be ‘furnished. | How | _& bank is a great business educa- of offering him, la made assistant! we are im! 4 by the fact that giothes 1 jntentes cee aay did my best to bring the conver tion back to more pleasant topic: oe 8 but Jack did not recover hie usual how he spent hin time after office reuades a woman to| manner until we had reached home hours, Ifa young man was caught | ove nonce end obey” him he thinks | #4 he was havin mat cated’ t been able to look into th een able to look into the stick of gum he was an object of| quired conditions.—Nashville Banner.|eutire, had I known that that was & manta ey oa Ane crucial Rareene i gee lite, bottle of pop he was branded as lar make women believi im to qui go back thi not all right when| more simple way of living, instead drunkard and a saloon — loafer. | things claring that he shouldn | it have saved him How buy the his romp with the | one day and $500 the next!” 1 grum- a salary lst hae It ts when you have to tal:a back | have begged him oaver to speculate | nothing more to ing the $1,500, it) when the next day re. Somers came to take me to trongly tempted » She asked about the 4 laughed at my enthusiasm. Althougl Jack about one girl sizing up an- feabieg, A }erlminal, Sue, it will be partly {es the DOOR, If he Joosn't take it,| other girl's costume it is impossible) 0 studio, to hours, an sible reason, It was but a few days after my re- turn that I noticed the worrted, anx- jou xpression creeping back on Jack's face, “What are you fretting about?” I asked him. “Oh, nothing much!" then as though it were a relief to give his feelings expression, ‘Those blasted plumbers got nasty wouldn't do another stroke of work unless I agreed to pay them all they asked. The robbers!" ‘Rut didn't they agree to do the for a certain sum?" —o—Smith told me about what It would be, and so I told them to go ahead, They want nearly $500 more than I had figured. The worst of it in T guess I'll have to pay it!" “But that's awful, throwing $500 away like that! We won't have enough to buy any stock at all with pretty soon! }ifteen hundred dollars he'll say when he finds out about the house! That's the reason I can’t have any trouble with the men, I must keep tho fact that we own the house away from Mr. Flam, If 1 turn out @ fault for urging me into this, partly mine for being weak enough he finished bitterly. Tow much of @ ralbe did you get?” but although Crawford was , Barberpole is good enough for said Mr. Dinkston ‘skirt dicks’ in fortune teller patter means ‘women detectives. a Aetoctive. ‘Barverpole’ is New| on the table. ‘Crawford’ ie Boston, and ‘Carry’ means an: that hittin is af Ua 5 Th “I don't believe it!” said Mrs. Jarr, “mareff told us we must have con. | onsider that it is their duty to them. plied Mr. Dinskton eoftly. arr told Clara latter only said that b the Occult should scorn such Buying Electricity. FACT which speaks eloquently | a: tor the administration of the| burs. | T nshes, apnoyed at his talking as he dearest house, ‘Where I find information las of ur conta cor to ont a may on os Peace You don't it; Mt dust, every bit himself!" elahiobennel gE oo OR hol A 4 ne eagnn reenter cil (Pethnmnananmemeamenenerncensestie mantener VE SERMD ren vit a del replied absent! compan! ‘ abled to furnish current cheaper “Twenty-five dollars a month,” he) snanler ¢ | eatablishmen| matter, which is fair and allowab! under the rules of tl selves to embarrass the Administr: tioa in the hope that the G. O. P. ma: cn, nee 8 confidence man,” Fe) make « clean-up in the elections this fall jut the groundwork of the op- | 2 ‘the ‘phone the| Position to Mr. Warburg is based on fevers in| Rube prejudice and Rube tactics, “The Rube Representative or Ben- ator who can go back in poses proclaim that he fought, Money Devil of Wall etreet is in th =The Week’s Wash By Martin Green dry man, “The Congress ts Rube- ridden. A Demo- cratic Congress is ated by men from the South and ; the land of wool hate and To the Mmit of their ability they make our Government a Government ‘No, | by Rutes, of Rubes and for Rubes. Our Southern Statesmen have no use for the No’th; unless they happen to get retained by some Northern cor- poration at a figure which permits them to forsake a political career and move away from a country where everything is fried before it ts put Some of the Republican Senators ything playing politics in the The only|%, tw feet from second bese day's game as told in detail in the sporting edition. “The last fellow I ever expected to, meet” is not infrequently a total; stranger at quarter of eight, and at, quarter of nine he may be cocupying the other half of the sofa and getting . acquainted as fast as con and the interested observers will per- mit. Sometimes before quarter of ten they are exchanging confidences— “if It bappens to be at be- jappens a Q fore somebody's auntio—who Te al- ways among the guests—| to yawn and wonder !f she has fori to put the empty milk bottles out, members of the “How They Met Com- mittee” will be whispering together and saying that those two are just monopol!: each other, and she couldn't have told him from Adam when he set foot in the house. Copgright, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), by selecting men not qualified for the job—about which not one voter in @ million ts informed in the slightest degree—could occur only to a Rube Intellect. “Senator Bristow of Kansas, the der of the Warburg opposition, je of the smooth and able Rube an. His term expires with the Congress. Out there in biis- Kansas, where they are har- crops worth millions and mil- Hons, numerous patriots are conniv- ing to nick Senator Bristow's job, Al- though nearly everybody in Kansas owns an automobile and can afford it, they are all strong eetaet the New York Money Devil. e Senator believeth oct ener opposition wa: polt- ics. But Reed dnd Hitehooc! Demo- pulling the Rube and A Reasoniess Reason. 66] WAS interested,” sald the head polisher, “in reading the etate- ment of one of the Gisagresing jurors in the Gifford murder cage in Albany, that he was influenced by a story about a man named Durant who was convicted of murder in Francisco and afterward found to innocent, that cent, nomebody put something over and died in a struggle to down the way of being a white haired boy ong bis constituents, Mr. War f @ successtul New York banker has an office in the Wall street electrical power companies of | 40 tit" He has been consorting with this country ts that while in 1903| the Money Devil for many years. The| t men electric railways purchased very lit-| fact that he knows all about banking tle power, ten years later 88 per cent. of all the power used was purchased, hes no weight with the many publio servants whose knowledge of finance fe confined to experience in discount- urchesed electricity | ing notes and Sauring out what they u) per cent., while in| ought to charge the Chicago, during the first few months jot the present year, vernment for railroad fare at the rate of 20 cents ace and | mile, used © per cent. hased electrical energy. This seems to indicate that by specializing and producing in "The Federal Reserve legislation ts en Administration measure, and the Adulnletration must etand or tall by large quantities | the result. For this reason President lee ere son ehould have @ free hand in intment of members of the Reserve on them,” sald the laundry man, Durant killed two girls, Minnie Will- fame and Blanche ont, He hit” the Lamont girl's body in a church steeple. He was con and exe- cuted on strongest kind of evi- jence. bas never been an im- timation put forth that he was inno- his execution cont. The =e of 55 nil id “lH rioting on Blackwell's Island tion,” was caused by too much investiga. *<

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