The evening world. Newspaper, November 10, 1914, Page 16

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en ead ® Mi ou eek Bd aig Hi at flag Evenfng World Daity Magazine. Tuesday, Nove Reflections of ¢ Tine) \ae Saas a Bachelor Girl ar NCI TAM TALKING TS LAST YEAR, By Helen Rowland i Cupettgta, 1004, ty The Poms Pubitthing Co. (The New York bvening World). HE enly way to teep love at high tide is to wait for the tide—es never to whip up the waves. ‘ se eercccowmemarcsieesescee NO, 19,480 DO WE REALLY MIND NOISE? Aimee ter tal tet a ede oe When a men decides to sive up cigars, look for the pipe ta bis peut ‘when he decides te give up a women—look for the other woman. Of course, every man admires a high-minéed woman; but wees | comes te marrying he prefers a cosy jittle thing without any steep pines cqmse back to New York lest week and too®, his first ride is her pp yrs tthe ook ata tn the oubway. . “But why such enepeaksdle noivel” was his first pained query. "Why to it tanpossible ¢o talk in this train? Why doce that guard slam els doors with o bang like a cannon? Why are the doors themesives + mode to ran with o maximam of recket? In Berlin any one of these * polece would be considered barbarous. De New Yorkers prefer to be Seafened ” They do. Does anybody recall that a eubway, elevated or curfece Hine in this city wes ever required at the cutest te plan ite construction @8 0 oclentific minimam-of-avise beste? Hes the matter ever beet @eriously discussed ? And the new subways. With ell the mfilions to be spent on them, ” — In thie respect is any improve- ’ ? , he makes an engagement with her the pleasure of seeing her becomes! a duty, and the thrill of inclination fe turned to the goal of obligation. No matter how much s man fe pining to be with « girl, the momsét | Optical Gelusion: That irresistible object which every man eees in ae looking-giass. That wonderful dexterity which a maa displays in hovering of « declération of Yeve, without overstepping It, w oy of them immortal if exercised in politics or ny or | LOVE Your CouNTRY: | LOVE Your CouNTRY. (WAS IN GERMANY | WAS IN ENGLAND “Two YEARS AGO FIVE ‘Years AGo 4 ‘The sort of man who paints the town red te always the one who hhe. the greatest righteous horror of woman who.does the same thing to , Nobody doubts for a moment that there are ways of reducing — Other cities have done it. When have we ever ? Let's admit that New Yorkers like noise. that he doesn’t it as the same old thing at all. } : Optic nerve: The nerve of a man who deliberately stands on an optal © Next Saturday docks and ferry landings im thie city will be, a windy day. pried loose from the monopoly of a law defying Taxicab Trust etreet corner on us ‘When are ratiread stations to be similarly divereeé? 4 enactments Jungle Tales for Children —By Farmer Smith— SLACK TIMES AT ELLIS ISLAND. 4 * OWHERE has Europe's war affected conditions hereaboute mere N strikingly than in the slackness at Ellis Island. An average of 6,000 immigrants used to errive daily. Now the average fe only 150. “Before the war,” declares Acting Commissioner Uhl, “there were always from 1,000 to 1,600 detained immigrants en the Toland. / Now there are only about 250.” The total qumber of immigrants inte the United States tn 1 LOVE Your Country, wirepa" Iwas Gowa ‘ MO et | 28 el Russia ®uT. . pepe g yey BP eerad eT, answered Jimmy, and thee sronterea what wae the matter. Then | “When the teacher calle the shoe! 1918 was 1,197,408, Of these the number admiteed trom the te Neveu are maning Baby . Russian Empire and Finland was 291,00, from Katy 265,642 Ll gr MIS tobe that | think.’ end from Austria ené Mengary 264,825. Today these nations 4 Q at) meee) eelceeeene aa Yet do we notice the dwindling of the incoming stream? Shall " Ewe even mice it before it starts up again? The country te big enough P ’ H ; TE) to take care of them wiv they come. It ta big encugh to do without Chapters from a Woman's Life re Se a roe they cease coming. Maybe the melting pot By Dale Drummond ; "” a have time to @o a better job with the material on hand before it 5 Ouprriaht, vaties | ‘glmmers down end stands ready for more. atts ‘ rst. i, The Prem Sa (oi Pa soe ey ws ‘g : HE firat night that I spent in shall now with no know! ledge. T would like the privacy ef my new quarters I was Very | pesition.” atigy aah: Up to last night thirteen States were quarantined because FAAAABABDAAABAIBAABBIRBARRAABAARBAL pamad and ante ‘a penne’ boson pike qieo "bare 6 O6t oenave there to a single case of the discase in the L Mr. Jarr Has J ified Nelt's pretty a | ee you find you are not Dominion, but bevetse wo Rave cant Infected cars ever the Ch J EF ily . ust Quali congenial surroundings. &| snougn, and that you are verder end we are afraid they might come back. Isn't our € arr am dainty room and every comfort. Here | your health, then we will tailere-te provide an ounce of prevention costing us a good ° As ‘Harlem’s One Best Martyr PISSASIABBIBSADBIIBASAADAAASABABAAAA| durean and wash stand. reg rd atenography and By Roy L. McCardell sree rida ned a eiengrecnble ox- Save S polalen been here. Pretty oft, what?’ added | etayed home, and he faltered. “May- perience at the store. One of the older| you. I have long needed a ‘Coyevicht, 1014, by Tho Fram Patidhlag Oo. (Tus Now Fort Bnaiag Went) Jenkins. be he's sick?” ins Gocastonally exhibited | secretary, but hated to relinquish aay | AS GOOD AS THE BEST. Ih. JARR dodged out of the/that dangled from Mr. Jarr’s pocket.| “Tt looks dike visiting day for other| But just then the bose came out Te eines igor me ever stance 1] Det of My work But I em growing . house carrying two ‘These were horrifc <disqovertes| folks, too!” sneered Johnson, of his sanctum. working. Especially wes]1 Gone,” he fi Thine. HE price of codfish is expected to go up—news we are sorry Domes oo large that, with @| Drought to Bie attention by the ditter-| cashier. ‘Tats to indicate Jenkine| °“T find a telegram from Mr. Jarr,|Ad been worl, Yapeusll ste Ea ipyve done vee to hear. door and & window or two,|iag of two young ladies, attired like] hadn't occasion to comment. @aying be ts called to Atlantic City,” bey et ine any i I had,ta my ball room @ cheap bed, | Pier way! ime yen have, Kis y. ; , bat day she had| “You are going to make . Tt is only partly the war this time. Thanke to the suc- “Aw, nix om the faithful empleyes|eaid ‘the boss. “Hem! You'd better! boon a nueseeans disagreeable, and | 2h 0 hy dear! I have aed (Gata of the British in the Atlanti fish h ‘ag wdhages stuff! retorted Jenkins, “If f had &| wire him to take a good rest at OUr! 4414 90 many cutting things, that T/stuation just es it i, What I i keeping antic open, fish merchants expect, fiat top like you got im your cage, and |expense. I hear Dawiing Butts, our! considered appealing to the manager. | doing for you is to walt a little ft fe trae, to find extra markets for the season's Newfoundland catch {fT hed my looker out in the ball and | biggest competitar, who has been get-| Jus: as I had decided to do so I heard |for my secretary than I cod in Moditerraggaa porte and Brasil. But unfortunately the eca- ; could ep tate the mata works & mY/ ting come ef ver best trafe away Saat rom to tans teak to to her ee of the others: want you to take time to become office and barebeaded—ee though fe down at Atlanti x ree ‘ot ife of a common partiouler, watch, amounting to 850,000 quintals, is 250,000 quintale short T'a been here since daybreak—I could belly g hes for Jarr? pod ponds forger—a Oe Sine Sn bere and ‘the average. Hence the expected jump in price. \: i ror think 34 Stor down | we ow t ng Cod is « wonderful fish, plentifel, cheap, clean, good eating. Fresh 2 . b wel bese bear mee ie ‘Trede ig revi w J “The fe sore ad at Jagr| see about it. ving. We ieee @? Gried, it ought to be more popular in this city than it is, Too . vs mustn't lose Edward Jarr, go matter | Back families in comfortable circumstances look down on cod as an inderior fish. This is all wrong. ‘They know better in Masnachusette. “Did het Did bet” asked Jenkins ed, boiled or baked, supported by mashed potatoes and a yellow sauce " what happens!” Lg the eame, it comforted me to think I Seer aaaamaaaaaaanansaaenmeanen. Man’ ” made @ good start at something “A ans a Man. ae Could I learn to be of value in . @ business office, I would be com- By Sophie Irene Loeb. paceal surely cou tae te foam ona pa? Bake “the pul Conmrtett, 2838, Las] ~ | time, I hoped, more money. its Yak Betas Worth The next al tas ! trea Tenving the for the eens post. ae Tt + milijonat mployees’ ba N=: multi - mil ire were by ploy: 4 te find Mr. such of tt as I had eagerly. Then he remembered he pieces of hard boiled egg therein, is a dish worthy of any occa- maigut be docked, too, any time be, or campany. alone; not subject to in-| ng —_———<4- dust whet value deus the city get out of the Coroners for the $169,705 per year that it pays to have them around? > ws THE CHRISTMAS SHIP. . O-DAY or to-morrow The World’s Christmas ship saile away Denver heiress, who bas had ne Ses. 4, MF.) plainer things. Putting ecores of marriage offers, Teation to the curious cast | 024. ums up man as follows: upon us, he quietly shook hands, eay- Man (Western Amortena) | ng. 4 time sewing bawling at the tope of thelr lungs, Affects exaggerated type of mascu- | ,,,/ nave come to, tale to yon, arin | going to the echool, which I was te pressini the next evening. and shouted messages to be conveyed IE most Garing irabecile we ever Maity. Wants to create impression of | some quiet piace. I have telephoned I wrote mother a cheerful letter be- le@em with seventy carloads of clothes and toys for the war|to Mra. Jarr, as though that good met is @ clean eort of « young t believe strength. that I shall not We St Bae me, fore T went 80 Ded, enoloetee Sas. orphans of Relgium, France, England and Germany. lady were war marooned to Burope fellow of our sequatatance who, *|nothing. of my. plane, merely It will bear with it the blessi f th os and Mr. Jare en route to resus her—-/iast week, suddenly married a girl that things looked brighter, and \ F with if the blessing of thousands of Americans whose | instead of her simply being at one Of! who, when he took her out to the bun. and sald: T hoped, soon, to be earning more Obristmes at home is going to be the happier for what they have donc | America’s most frequented resorts, | gaiow that he'd fized up for her in Man (Buropean)—Interested in art,| “Now tell me all about it. Wny/ Lastly adding th Desterpt fe Gevolate children in war-racked Europe, The many volunteers— S) basy men and women who have gladly given their time to sort and onty three hours away “If any of my friends see me now I'm disgraced forever,” muttered Mr. J Wack the gifts as they piled up at the pieri—will ¢arry something | Jerr aa he dodged low and shielded id you not come to me before you! nothing had mn heard Jersey, confessed that ehe could cock « decided to make @ change? I failed) 1 maid nothing at all of Mr, Flam’ ‘e . in my care in the past. I do not in-| piens concerning me, as so long @ ving with her after ehe’d made that Man (American Indian) — Very | tend to fall again.” time must elapse before Bothing but fadge. He went right on oe the trenches | amusing. Heceived only one proposal| + I do not intend to leave my|could be done And I did net through the coming holidays that will more than repay himeelt trom view with the hat boxes sds — ; lah egy ia oom years’ ob- ly time, But 1 alt. that kee te Wnew 5 oat we day. : \ repay them for the | qs he hurried past Gus'e place on the| ‘The man who insists in blatting into pervations alter's girl's laeal ef bims,| rohan’ ccnone cates. earn to be 6| “Among ctuer “leassua, ¢ work. corner. your ear al) about the war, as be man hae time to talk about/ He likes women who cling and graft , ae LR, I have to educate| trouble had Or ae me to be + The Santa Claus ship weighs anchor amidst a salvo of good | But he was esen. Yet Gus, for all views it, while you're riding home in a we es tet Nes. At fe er | teke mpathor o6 Wishes. The sympathy of a great and peaceful people goos with it to | &M suecieneare. 7s cue Sisters | See suewee, te Soccer ereweant ‘the Lo Continoeds. ‘empty little hearts across the sea. noblemen. And Slavinsky, while but/favor of the repeal ef the Sullivan ieee an bumble glasier, had yet that sense | law. : of consideration for the feelings of —_— , others that marke the gentleman, : Hits From Sharp Wits whether his station be high or low. ae persons’ trains of thought are bis willingness to begin at the bottom! For, although Mr. Jagr bumped weve penem bd te track. 4 scent ear, apenis e be promoted right into Gus and Slavinsky coming yw ear.—Al- aver to call a bivt Peay Journal. e Ore eer eround the corner, beth puntended not |p journal. | We ee) to eee or know him, It's queer how close ‘Bundle toting for the wife ia the tive is Columbia Sta’ 4 degrading stigma of the ret, Mr. Bernard Blodger Ni 1H z Fi ; efit 2 . & “Where ignorance is bi f he ein | Marked the man on tho car, y | (King Snake of the Society of Splen- ‘Hie le the man who 1 "iad ya el to set a dictowraph.” did and Bagacious Bnakes: or Militant your formar love eétairs, ay SAE eel, does pot come! it ie a pretty diMcuit matter to| Married Men's iva toe, (he neeare oF te Cor & yard wide! pring up « child in the way the neigh. | ton), had elwaye i return wnereta! Appeal. bore think it ought to ‘so. Toledo And there wes Mr. Jarr carrying of the women whe 5 aie of b tebe Fiabe aR bandboxes and a wicker sult case—an ¥ SS Fi be 4 tapos labor as slavery.—| Suspicion always sleeps with one|Srticle as feminine as the parasol with we Sasthese y e e e eve open . o e J E j 3, "oir ton "pag your opiuion oll fiL persons, alraze cepestens oi} fy F

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