The evening world. Newspaper, November 3, 1914, Page 12

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he RARE SCR et mma eSB aS Pa a ak Sh. har * med om warn * AE BES or 3 ? " © ESTABLISHED BY JOREPH PULITZER. ‘Pedlighed Dally Except Suptay by she, Press Pubitenina Company, Noa, 63 to ghd by en For THe Good sone PRRAGER roneere TS EE" how. Go wore: T's Recond-Clase Matter. xv DUTY. For, nd and the Continent and tries In the International IE SAKE of 1 Tinton, VOLUME 55....... CLOSING IN. F": the general public the indictment of twenty-one financiers seeee NO, 19,482 lormerly in the New Haven directorate on the charge of hav- a: ing conspired to monopolize commerce by their administration ©) @f the road, is further assurance that the law, though slow, does not > forever withhold ite hand from the rich and powerful. For New Haven stockholders the action of the Federal Grand hae a more direct interest. It offers them promise that evidence P. Wreeke! their rosd and scattered their money. IT'S AY DUTY To THE a The real owners of the New Haven road aro not going to swallow Wilt Ve = sate! Fak iOte shia H Whe story that their millions “vanished into thin air.” Chairman El- Your NINO pi + a Mote set out to locate a few of those millions. More are lying eanug ? "and safe—eomebody knows where. , . Criminal conspiracy to monopolize commerce is an offense ageinet me Ghe lows of the United States. But, the New Haven conspirators once | the hiding place of the missing millions is no mystery. jext comes restitution. a ee | 4 Nothing so formidable about the Massachusetts ballot. et What it calls for is a féw minutes’ concentration and thought— “Sig beth sulghty goed things te take fate o voting booth, | pea 2 ee THE SERIOUSNESS OF JOY RIDING. WARNING to joy riding chauffeurs to be posted in every garage in New York State bas been issued by Secretary of N s State May. It ie brief and to the point: VOTERS Ar@ ENTITLED 1077 Aay chauffeur or other person who without the conseat i of CHARGE eg of the owner hall take or cause to be taken from a garage, SUFFRAGETTES IN ATTENDANC etabdle or other building or place an autombile or motor ve- AS _PARTN hiole, and operate or drive, or cause the same to be operated , ©F Griven, for his own profit, use or purpose, steals the same and {e guilty of larceny, and ehall be punishable accordingly. — Section 1293A of the Penal Code. The punishment may be imprisonment up to ten years. Secretary May is right in believing that few people appreciate ‘the seriousness of the usual first step leading to a joy ride. “How chauffeurs realize that in order to steal a car they don’t havo break into a garage to take the car out or even step into one they @anding in the street and ride away in it? How many ever § that simply running their employer's car oven a single block ut of the direct route from the tguse to the garage without the own- fee's consent makes them guilty of theft according to law?” _ Bo far, good. Remind and restrain the chanffenr. Put tho fear | @f the law into his many friends who hanker aftor auto rides and ‘eqaz him to his downfall. * Put what about indulgent or indifferent ownera*who don’t tako ‘the trouble to learn what becomes of thoir care after they are through ‘wlth them for the day? In how many cases of joy riding that end |) in arrest we read thet the owner of the automobile refuses to prose- _ gute his chauffeur. - Might it be that if the owner were made to share responsibility for trouble his car might cause at night his chauffeur would find _ fewer temptations? 3 HBAS HABHSHALAAAAAKAAAAAAAAR SABA S HS The Jarr Family Mrs. Jarr Still Pines for Home, By Roy L. McCardell to-day and she's going to treat us all] “But a soldier’: idow's pension Cuperight, 1014, by The Frew Publiahing Oo, (The New ort Evening World), to a Iittle trip, And wollahe might! | Stops If she mar ‘ain, and there a | really should go home,” faitered | York isn't no town for a eingle mao | [t was Mr. Blodger's influence in poll-|@/n’t no dependent children,” sald Mrs. 3 “Here I have come| Tbe last time I was on Broadway 1] ties that got her on the waiting list | Mra. Blodger. unexpectedly to Philadel apent eighty-five cents as quick as A|of marriagable ladies at the Old Sol-| “Couldn't there be some arrange- diers' Home, and the superintendent ment made between the Old Soldiers’ —_—_——_-t- -— --- tn an automobile with just the clothes never mind tBis bickering!” | telephoned to Bernard for us to bring | ome and an orphan asylum in such ‘The Rockefeller Foundation has found « task worthy of I'm wearing, and new you want me ted Mise Giedys Cackleberry,| out our Indy friend, as old Sam|cases?” aaked her husband. “I sup- and it HAS been quiet,” Mre. Jarre; Mrs. Blodger hesitated a minute| loss and to appeal to a grateful toun- M | @nother man’ | appear | | IH atmosphere in which they lived—the| he had many temptation one I had courted—I kept away from them as much as possible. Thisiwas| tevin him made easier as Neil lived on a quiet, unfashionable street some distance| will accomplish much, has already trom them and from our old home. Kip tienes hak . hia one The Evening World Daily Magazine. Tuesday. November 3; 1914 Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Couynaget, 1014, by The Pres tustimag On (The Now tort Srening Wend) Y Daughter, hearken unto the Litany of Fifth avenue which the Cynic chanteth In bis heart: # Oh, Providence, be merciful and deliver us from the Freaks | and Follies that offend our sight on @e highways of Babylon. ‘ From Bores and Bounders and women in blue serge dresses with bisc® | satin sleeves, ob, spare us! ¢ For it hath come to pass that a man cannet distinguish one dambel” | from another, nor,a debutante from a grandmother, nor his own wife trom. ince all are clad in the “uniform” of sixteen and seek te: equabs.” Yea, they are SO girlish! cture hats, oh, spare us, For how my jaster patch, oh, let us out! From old gentlemen who wear pink bouttonleres and ogie the Sweet Young Thing; from old ladies who dangle Tame Cats and talk baby talks from schoolgiris in long black earrings and false bair; From married “bachelors’s and men who make love at first sight; trom, | yesterday's violets and soiled white gloves; from sleeveless white gowns; |from embalmed beauty, canned youth and preserved figures; from neas- , ‘society, imitation love and cubist complexions; from tangoitis, neuritis : and divorcitis, oh, heaven deliver us! ‘ Verily, vertly, in all the world there is naught else like unto IT; neither anything so obvious nor so sophisticated, so humorous nor s@ dazzling, so shocking nor #@ beautiful, so foolish nor so FASCINATING! - Then lead me to Washington Square or bury me in Jersey that I may © | avoid its snares and escape its nee | and lov@i@ickness shal! in time pass away, but New Yorkitis is a chronic Disease! For hay fever may be cured Selah. ‘ CHAPTER Cll. membering Har bling propensities and From women with whitewashed faces and carmine smiles, from m im checked suits and white spats, oh, set us free. From Tea Dances where the too-much-married dispel their ennui, where the debutante sippeth cocktails from a teacup, where the hircd partner flattereth old ladies and flirteth with young ones, and where im: than ever convincing will fasten blame upon the men who You BET Your. Boots IAN GOING To VOTE. THAT'S THE RIGHT pertinent babes in men's clothing pose as fin rounders, now deliver us: For they. are all fooling themselves, but NOT each other! } From women who carry “sleeve-dogs” and “windows” in white vs an preserve his {illusions concerning a Sex that” | taketh iteelf as a Joke and arrayeth itself as a Comic Supplement? . From the artificial rose upon the left shoulder and the artificial rose | Upon the cheek; ftom thin-necked women in decollete and fat-necked « women in Medici frills; from all womén in white stockings and black , shoes, deliver us. From the black velvet neck ribton, the fish hook ctirl and the court Chapters from a Woman’s Life - By Dale Drummond \ Copyright 1014, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). 4 fhe Y .. ’ uld talk, loved games of chance? Ml through Jack’s childhood, his ARRY and Fanny Eberhardt / poyhood and young manhood I fought tried to be kind, but re-| this inherited love of gambling until re-|at last I had bis promise, which I the believe he will TRY to keep, never marks about Jack's 68M-10 gamble, During bis college course never failed me, althot I know , that he has now passed th r danger point, and I can die in peace, you. es “His love for you and the cplidren mplished more than I could have” hoped to do, and I only write to One morning a telegram was sent] You ae fam dol ie should 1 opened the wire with fear Could it be that Jac! me from the office. Mr. Flam in-|ever show a desire to gam ever ’ closed it in @ kind little note from |so small or insignificant a way. Then say but That s All the Good It Does himeelf, saying he also had had a| You will be armed with the knowledge VORA AY BOen AAAASAAAHABAIH | crossage and that he hoped soon to| Would to God 1 had been, for bave « position for me. and bad! communicate with m i No! It was from Janet. other died this morning,” was all| was when I visited you to see thet in id. ix: message, and for his not I might have saved my loved band. This knowledge will help to help. him fight a good fight this insidious enemy. = “IE cannot tell you how. pleased I your card playing you had not fol- led Mr. Flam up on the tele-| lowed the foolish, yes wicked, fashion phone and thanked him for forward- Cy ae for money. Hold Jack Susan, even from to make money quickly. It is for, him, Now, one thing more, You may think It strange that in view of what I have told you I should have been willing Jack should enter a. broker's office. At first I was much opposed I told bim, knowing! to it, but when Jack declared it was ” fi ey {te colossal capacity for beneficence. Kadowed with millions “to to go to Atlantic City, we going to Atlantic City in| Smunk couldn't last till morning. catalase = yy said nothing of whe: ‘ “ SS <= t buried,” I told him. what eam it better do than feed starving non-combatants iny rest and the quiet!” insisted Mra. “I 40! ww how they telephone message Christmasing Witte you fie ts go with me’ Pye the most cruelly wronged and outraged nation that ever roused Blodger, while her daughters by her along at home—I should too late, and might ha in Novembe: | “No, thank you! I don't believe I the aympathies of moders men! first marriage, the Cackleberry girls, it for another time. 4 r (4 x wae ae ‘ OLA Se A both chimed, “Ob, pleaéé do, Mrs. Mis’ Bally,” sata Mr. | to pay our expenses— By Sophie Irene Loeb Ce eT case tear taal Jari” an old friend. rie such friends—when the brave old|« H be WHO KNOWS? ‘ “Why, really, I have rested here, turkey to ber.” hero died, leaving her to mourn his! Covvrisit, 1914. yy 1h Pree Publishing Co, f coramunionted | wih | ‘@ single question, nor! ASCAL’S famous reflection that the difference of half an inch | arsued. ond Se as, | t#7 by tee ckis of hor teeth.” bic | Deadha Pap usnial Chetetmast thown the allgntest interest ia the of x * Ths t ugh. It had been . Jarr, if you're wer-| “Twenty-four doll: nd a Poul e town ir. Flam in the length of Cleopatra's nose might have changed the bis-| auc Mrs, Jarr would not have| ried about the expense of salee ta | eurmanar an inet: Wan eke ‘The sslesfolke are anxious yritton to him ask~ tory of the world was more sentiment than psychophysics. Atlantic City, Mra. Bmuak, the sol-! young man could live on twenty-four| For you to come down, he had, even that th " ~' Not 90 the reasoning of a Philadelphia profoasor of osteopath dier's widow, draws her first pension a month—if he lived in Camden.” The goods are ail ready, with my mothe! sod that 1 was try: ion. And ‘whe pate the blame for Europe's agony on a kink in the Kaiser's api: mgt ppg oo & re ence of hic lesion, the doctor, producing ab | Jerr tho rr . satis woe ivy Metts Koos fe age” jngrennectesanas|| SO Wags the World They hope you're considerate And goon will be there. November te a boon for the early Of Mr. Berearé Biodger, tired out Christmas buyer, it ts not a bit too lnpoleen was almest s hunchback. lls great edversary, after the day‘s incossant exertion of Besides, you can go home from At- lantic City just as well as from here.” “But 1 mise them so!" Mrs. Jarr “Who knowe but thie malformation indicated osteopathic dealens — Fesulted tm overstimulated brains in these and @ther equally famous tpstances?” ; aah protested, “I have been in Philadel- The ides ie sot new. A society in Paris has for years been accu-| phia only two days, and it seems to Malating data to prove that genius, unusual capacity or energy are in-| Me !t has been weeks and weeks.” varlably attended with asymmetry of head or face. In exceptionally hy sk Aura pp coatleerd s‘btainy or active people the two sides of the head are markedly differ-| Blodge Duggun it! Only I {esueth one: hi ' magesine story writ 1 bur- | fonuite ollnteret they mterad’ ineX: | actually do it. Procrastination te geon who will firmly reaist the temp-| suspiciously and banged the door on | t! hief of these kard-working peo- tation to use the words “raueo ng] their way out. (Not th ple's time and energy, and ‘obsession in his yaras, And some io", wore helping: If yo! tl us who put off our Christmas shop- cents every time he leaves t! Not long We took a ri Consideration ia the key that bi words out. nae the Pocano ‘Mountains with duplicas o risked devilish sor 1p who'd Little woman, if your make-up ent—one ear higher than the othor, jaw off level, nose or mouth do. | red for @ good home I wouldn't You mey be only as old as you| siniction in r |evae ire Raturally pond flected to one side. bore, Only that I wasn't grasping, 1) reel, but you don't get that feeling | "Keep your shirt on, RIGHT NOW and bave your might have gone to New York an@/ 5, thinking backward. Qe as be shot around a M around before it becomes late. Doctors say most of us are more or lets out of drawing. Maybo| married well.” e Um "We, "88 erat eat | The eineee ai rf y | r ry if we got worse we'd be great. ‘Maybe that’s why you tried to! ne apyemal depthe of boredom are| up there are lots of springs Rte aly’ wied ai borrow three dollars from me before! 1), by those wives whose hus- | ‘Bie road, and I've got a bucket! will be when the i boarded ee ae oe woeks' | DAnds are following the big war by! ue trouble about rl erik Ek ere caineieen Waite: Hunt ue te |e of maps planed to the wall 804 / us that we ‘haven't eno! lary or Cousin Jane or the Ought not to undertake to buy 0os- beige bed fidence in our ability” is that we're| little ones In’ your home, and. tak trich plumed hate for six daughtere| We were married!” @ald Mrei@itood: | , altogether too Nkely to some time during this fine weathe: who regard washing dish: y= sar dinate bead the thin, rou mi, ery an ing the tryin an te ony seidty, needlessly choked with more og less J caste 1 Tae contribute’ great Gtegrace.—Houston Poat. bronchial hyeterta. Those i talked-of moving plat-|to the clerks. — forms for streets of New York| In other rai op now, even if Hits From Sharp Wits, you nothing ‘We have generally noticed that the | ¥!t® , re prohibited by law | soon will be a positive necessity. It man who can rat! “oft A chat te can owe bis board. A hi Lp ts rang . rhe latitudes about 0 000,000 of | boarder, Why." @nd eurgioal operation. few of then. would wi ven! See teps I last, obligation. himeelt hie wite _rpprosohfully, STA, ToNRORE fo 8° oa, Ne GPa] The trouble about having & nice, uya the first thing r . Bei b anh mercenary one, is it, of it, the same tora : 4 gewy wie ore to Fons oats ie inet uye many Gan, iy men.) the for as much as four minutes | the: so] “Ne, Bernard, my handsome gar- ereed a teh without saying anything, | on the 25th of December. on @ toot.—Col+| ang, no!’ cried Mrs. Blodger, semti./ The folks who have been hurting | hi 1 bound to accuse him of n ‘By careful deliberation such heart- “at ae arnt mend arbi | "Gast i ‘eiteweana ei] tans ues ner tec creo ” me, bs . Most people are liars to the extent| “Ob, Mawr, you make me sick, bruise, up y soir iRinkiag about. ° bis la ‘Christmas period may be lifted. at one time or an-|eried Mins Irene Cackleberry. — —a Recently we visited a military club ‘We've asked four my of them | without seetag a single turned | to create " 0; asked wmusteah three moathe or so Pee ers 2 And they'll show them with care; | ing to get a knew “Janet had a right to blame me, 1 felt 1 fens bay er re mete nent had endured. les, be welcome, She had said nothini ly. of| you or your preciou liked to live to see [should have row up. But should | be equally wiee editor will pay him forty — ping add that much to their burden, fount if I should have the cot it to ‘Wellington, siways stoed with one shoulder higher than the looking for work for his wife, B t soon to save countless salespeople ; yy Clarence Cullen took from m: @ther, The Grooks said Alexander was lopsided. Pericles had jow don't you go worrying about (taney peated a ae Coolidge, pe + Pate ttne @ peculiarly shaped head and neck. Archimedes walked with Mr. Jarr and the children," Mrs. Blod- norright, 1916, by The Pra Pubtiohiog Go, Ihe Now Yer Livming World), peddle Oe nites se, Gece One rene Me ulet eolt- 0 terrible stoop. ger went on, “They'll be all right.| Wr being a period of prophecies, here| ing. “Why, our time!” they shot| The truth is that everybody ad- | contained to. save her boy woman 7 a gifted | Sack, hufily, When we volunteered | yocates early buying,. but few| fom gambling, from Mie father’s fate, | aioua. 1B. 7 1 to talk to you, #0 I write what I "y you should know. It may help you my_ boy. *oTacl se Meath r—long before born—w' Ktucky one, else the would a confirmed gambler, Jack have swiftly than it did. You (ome ‘what ‘he fmally did, and how he died. But neither you, nor the others, not even J y it] was not the Gret time law to procure money toamaaie, ‘Twice before th nd came he would have wes to prison had it jot been for saved him, and us, from Flam. Twice he @iegrace, Do you wonder that I wished my boy to be with Mr. Flam? My boy, wh born with the love of gambii ins, and who, almost from ¢! 0 was in his time iw the only business wished to know T reluctantly gave my consent, Xs. ‘went with feo 7 Finall; ir, Flam consen| take him, frst Dinding him with a solemn, ise not to speculate in any way, Delieve he has kept that promise, .. © “I have nothing to leave you the children, Susan, save my love. have told Janet to send 7. my " vraittt ae ny ‘father w a from Jack's er born. MOLHER.” f brid, visited me? T thought I should scream ‘Would I have done any differently had she talked to me when I first knew her, or would I have gone on just as I did, living for m: own eelfish pleasures. Heaven knows. 1 ‘wae terribly unhappy. terribly Gtapirited. I did not worry about the children, altho T missed them more than any one ed. But I knew, @ « they were safe and well cared for % with mother and Nora to look after + them. * As I eat there, with the letter from the dead woman in my hand, a ter- rible lor to see them and then came over me, only to be moment with a feeli shame ¢! I had entertained even for a moment. I must atone— must live, work and be brave, so that when Jack came back to me I should -- be able to help him, to comfort and enco' him to commence over again with me at his side. (To Be Continued.) stores are crowded with Yuletide cus- | were spent Spor garment or Christ- tl mas token fag neither needed por wanted by the recipient, and the oman who strained

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