The evening world. Newspaper, December 1, 1914, Page 16

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AA LANAI A LC IRABRR AION GT? 8 5 SR NIL NRE a 5 NL ONES ae ER ira. Se ne i oo SE 9 wii ¢ Evening World Daily Magazine. 1914 a - Gbe oro. || Such Is Life! Bf axeiths: ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. , Nos. 63 t Daily Except Oey yy ts, Frere Fudiisning Company, Nos o Reflections of a Bachelor Gir RALPH PULITZDPR, President, 63 Park Row. JOHN. Tr JOMBPH PULITHER, Ste Mecrtiaty, @ Park Row. Fist or be None ese RS Genecrenier 4 at the Pont-Ottice at Now York ae Hecond-Clage Mater. The GAS BILL ano By Helen Rowland ; f nited Bteten | All Countrien In the International We TELE PHONG-BILL (Werld for the United Stetes end Canada. Copyright, 1914, hy The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Year. Mier some for love is like buying stock on margin; you are pa| Postal Union. 50) One Yeoar.. jolOne Month + $9.75 oly +eeeNO, 19,460 | im WHEN DO THEY MEAN TO MAKEGOOD?, b T*: New York police force has had a long respite from the sort Bs of public criticism and prodding that followed the Rosent!.al kt murder and the firet Becker trial, | For the last eight or ten months nobody has nagged the police. | The city has tly agreed to give the force time to pull itself to- gether, gather up its self-respect and take a fresh grip on its dutie A new Police Commissioner came into office under singularly favor- able auspices. His character and his pledges gave New Yorkers) strong hope that he and his men would fight crime in this city as it) had never been fought before. Have they begun? Are criminals finding the city at this mo- ment any less comfortable than it has been for them for these ten be Years past? bs). The two mt pernicious and persistent varieties of criminal activ- » Aty that menace the lives and property of New Yorkers to-day are ® 1. The bomb industry, 2. The system of contract crime. a 4 + The two are closely associated. The bomb is oftener the weapon | > of blackmail than of anarchy. Professional thugs who-hire thom- selves out to push the business interests of their employers by intim- > dating or killing competitors are equally proficient with guns or dynamite. | Organized crime of the sort that killed the poultry dealer Haff “mever has been more bold, more rampant. Bomb outrages are so frequent that other cities of the country point to them as recognized ‘Phenomena of New York life. While the police are supposed to bo | searching the town for one band of assassins, another sct coolly step ed * Ei . girl waiting for a propostly for something which existe only in the imagination. Nothing hurts a woman's vanity like mecting her husband's old sw: hearts and discovering what an assortment of simple little nonentitie: won out against. « \VOLUME 56..... No matter how long a man may keep he always expects to marry one who has waited. Every now and then a man washes his conscience clean with the tears of repentance just in order that he may have more yoom tc §0 making black marks. | | The first sign of love in a man ts his willingness to quarrel with y So long as he remains perfectly polite you may assure yourself that doesn’t regard you in the light of a possible wife. AND Tie DRuG STORE THE DRY GOODS STORE, THE DocTor , THE DENTIST THe OcUUST, THe HAIR DRESSER , THE CLEANER, AND THE MAID ANDTHE BUTCHER, THE GROCER THE MILRMAN, THE ICE, THE COAL AND THE LAUNDRY It fs difficult to say which is more flustering to a man—his first tet? a-tete with a girl he is just beginning to love or his 1 one he has just finished loving. Funny, but a girl will spend two hours curling her hair and making, herself fascinating with perfume and baby ribbons, merely to tell a mam that they never can be anything but “friends.” A woman can “forgive” a man almost anything on earth if he jus® keeps her waiting long enough for the opportunity. 3 at The climax of a kiss is that exquisite psychological moment just before’ it happens. = Things You Should Know About Yourself : ~ 2—Why Do We Need Fresh Air? | Thee is not a sleeping room in the land which contains sufficient air ter” OUBTLESS man was intended lisse one sleeper through one entire WE WILL NEVER WE ME WHAT'S LEFT AND LEAVE ME SONE Money : meet AIN | to live out of doors; but, being | night. ‘The advantage of large sleep~ | forth, pull their guns and shoot down some new victim. Peace DRESSHARER, i Thi Uae an adaptable animal, he sur- Jing rooms iis, not “hat they contal * Contract crime is the specialty of gangs, each working under some SUINER., We TKILSR, Go To WORK | Mi i Nac Aad ee Peer ctahann er in rapid enough | master crook from whom it takes orders, Over and over again the ME TEWELER, Pt EA Sone fag froth the ain 19 Ute-giviag oes make good our poisoning it—w! howe F police have boasted their intimate knowledge of these gangs, their » haunts, their ways, their leaders. Why not use this knowledge? Why not fight organized crime With organized force? What have Police Commissioner Woods ard » fis men done to persuade New Yorkers that the two worst forms of | lawlessness which now imperil peace and safety in this city are being ) Stamped out or even held in check? Our reconstructed police force has repeatedly protested its refor- ‘mation and its zeal. ‘The public has patiently waited for it to come /n and show its metal. Where are tho results? Where are the iches in the ranks of crime? oe - IF SO, WHERE? SDOUBTEDLY this is the most stupid, senseless and un- necessary war of modern times,” declares the German Crown Prince. Then undoubtedly the wisest, most far-sceing, most magnanimons Ing any modern nation could have done would have been resolutely | head it off. | Wasn't a big chance missed? If we need fresh air when sleep! ments and pouring into it their own it we need it even more when with other waste product: carbonic acid, which we all give out, happened to! people. Like ourselves, gas and lamy be a distinct color, we should see the and candles need oxygen to burn wells, ag emerging from mouths and noses. hence the very lights which afford Bur ‘as it is we notice nothing. When/ much pleasure are plainly a source 8 we realize that about one-third of | danger. ch light is a hungry ine lifetime is supposed to be passed truder, devouring With all its might in sleep, the idea of fresh air is worth | the scanty amount of oxygen provi considering. From hour to hour the/for the guests. That is what is mean’ lungs and skin give off their poison-| when we say that gas vitia' ous gases; they are breathed and re-| ° In dancing rooms there sho! ison us, Breath-!an extra.amount of outside air prea- 1 the processes |ent; for, when dancing, the extra ef. nd lowers re-|fort makes us consume a greater amount of oxygen than otherwise, and so one doubles and trebles the amount of carbonic acid thrown off. use = ments taken in the open air are best. absorbed and they pol ing bad air reduces PCHDODDDDOODDHDDDHDDDOHDDHDDODDODHDHDWDDDDDODHDODDHGO@GDODHDOO Mr. Jarr Escapes From His Home To a Far More Homelike Place FEHQBOOOGDOWHDLOQHHHHHOOHDOGOODODOOODOTIVOOOEVG “Where's Mr. Jarr?" asked Mrs. Mudridge-Smith after she had been kissed with discriminating taste, where the make-up was the lightest, by Mrs. Jarr. The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Covrright, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), KR. JARR's social past and place just as Mrs. Mudridge-Smith Present performances, if re-|drew up to the door of the Jarr dom- corded and diagrammed ac-|jicile and bade her chauffeur wait. TOOT. or specifically not valld On the line she was honoring when she tendered them, There are two aides to these remt-| niscenc of “knew you when." is!” he exclaimed, I told you always to look right where you are when anything is loat,” replied the Baby Baboo! “But I don't understand how you knew my knife was in my pocket,” said Jimmy. “| put it there,” sald his companion, 2 SLIPPING LOWER AND LOWER. ) NEW dodge of the taxicab trust to evade the law comes before and lessens vitality Poor ventilation ts the chief cause | of tuberculosis and js more fatal thant almost all other causes put together. Mac abasic Ps JUNGLE TALES FOR CHILDREN—By FARMER SMITH IMMY MONKEY was making a) “I'll go out and look for it.” boat in his room one day. The| “Why don't you look for it where " replied Jimmy, loo Suddenly Mr, Giraffe poked his head ‘and then continuing! in the window, and Jimmy stopped |“I gue: out of the window.” for a minutes. at Mr. Giraffe. Mr, Giraffe ducked out of the win- dow and went away laughing. of his companion. “How should I know where your knife is?” asked the Baby Baboon. istance. J Baby Baboon was helping him, |%U are?” asked his companion. ‘How many pockets have you? “Get out of here!” shouted Jimmy “Where is my knife?” asked Jimmy “[ guess I threw it out of the win- ‘ tar . . t, cording to the em of Michael An-/ Mrs, Mudridge-Smith loved to call on| The ople who “knew you when”| “He had to hurry off,” said Mrs. Jarr. i ‘ oy 4 Magistrate Barlow of the Yorkville Police Court, gelo Dinkston, EMiciency Engineer,|Mrs, Jarr, Her attire and her town certs they} “You know how busy he is, so many |dow at Mr. Giraffe,” Jimmy whined. laughing. 2 : ‘The taxi trust consists of the combined Mason-Scaian | ould have resembled a fever chart.|car always created a most satistac- * It did Mrs, Mud-| concerns are seeking his services, He | Ni Yellow Taxici oy i T 5 H jiefly: 'T ,9.| Sometimes, such as when he was/tory sensation of envy in the neigh-|ridge-Smith more good to drive inj had to attend a meeting of a Board of | ‘ cab Companics. The scheme is briefly; ‘To fill tho coerced into accompanying Mra, Jart!borhood among those who knew her|her car to visit in the neighborhood| Directors.” | Chapters from a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond place on a public cab stand in front of a hotel with a Mason- man licensed cab, When a patron from the hotel hails tho first | ab the chauffeur makes some difficulty or delay. Meanwhile tic low Taxicab starter pushes u button and a Yellow taxicab from | Rearby garage appears to take the passenger. Mis can be worked weral times an hour, while independent cabs further back in tno get no show, Two chauffeurs of the taxi trust who practiced this trick at entrance of the Hotel Manhattan wiil be arraigned in court to ow, charged with obstructing a public cab stand, to social affairs, his marking ran high, Clara Mudridge, she had to well up to “Good Behavior, 100 per le with street car conductors cent.” Then, when he dropped into!over transfers that were long expired Gus's popular cafe on the corner, the chart markings might have zigzagged down to zero, in harmony with the company Mr. Jarr was keeping. But, as Mr. Jarr explained, these were all hypothetical ratings. Gus, the sometimes genial proprietor of the house of call at the corner; Mr, Slav- insky, the glazier; Bepler, the butcher; Muller, the grocer; Rafferty, the builder; John W. Rangle, friend and wh who “knew her when” than to mingle, among the elite who did not seem to know her at any time, i Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers j When She Is Older Than He. HOULD a inan imarry a woman older than himself? No, without exception, if she is many years older, just as a girl is} foolish if she marries a man forty or fifty years her senior. May and December do not mate successfully, But it is undoubtedly true that there This was to impress upon the vis- itor that the Jarrs commercially a: well as socially were persons of conse- quence, although perhaps they migit | at present boast of a most modest men: “IT thought I'd just drop in, dear, and ask you if you could go with ine to a war benefit to-morrow,” asked Mrs, Mudridge-Smith, ‘ot if it Is to be where the Count- ess Bazoo and the Beagles and that crowd are,” said Mra. Jarr. Copyright, 1914, by ‘The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Krening World), » WL. were also long silences, when o1 OHABTER OX hearts were too full for apeech, ana ACK! nA the nearness of each to the other was. “Mr. Flam! all we desired. I clung to Jack with As the older man put a wild, Dre qiticd Gevotion at times, empted to * him to go awa; & protecting arm Over! notto give himselt up. No one h Jack's shoulder TI left} seen him, and Mr. Flam would never. I would give them a few Then I felt the tell, But I did not yield to the temp-. tation, did not say one word that sould influencé him contrary to his, plans, the room. minutes together. tears running down iny faco and I ‘if the Yellow Taxicab Company had devoted to improving and {neighbor, and all others who consorted | ave been many happy unions in which the wife was a few years—say four| “Oh, THEM!" cried the visitor. | qetermined they shouldn't see them.| About 8 o'clock Mr, Flam came for, rising its service one-tenth part of the energy it has waste |at Gus's place, were warm-hearted | °° Ave—older than her husband. Such a difference is an added element of| "How can you think It? Why, youl y needn't have cared, for when I re- looking out into ther UigMt tee to beat the taxicab ordinance, it would not find iself now in {and worthy persons, well enough| "8k but tt does not surely bring unhappiness, The reason why a man is|know the Countess Is an impossible| turned after a little, both of their) looking. ight, thinking, a ts Gondlti é ae «| gatiofied with their social status--let | Wise to marry a woman his own age or a few years younger is because wom-|!mpostor. She aifects @ foreign AC-| cheeky were wet, and they were!” it had been arranged that Jack wag! lesperate condition of an outlawed corporation constantly seeking Mrs. Jarre and ber friends think ay/ 2 &8@ more quickly than men—or have done go in the past. It is easier for| cent when, as a matter of fact, she's) erankiy unashamed of their emotion. |to stay all night with Mr. Flam, oo! re underhand means to foist itself upon a public that has learned to | tey aay, them to keep thelr youth to-day, a dressmaker from Bellaire, Oblo.| «4, he's come back to us, Sue?"|ing back to me in the morning, cannot even yet dwell on the anguis! ‘The Heagles are sharks and Col. Bil-| y4y, yriam aald as I entered the room.|cannot even y always felt sure he would!” If you still able time, him a good deal longe: care for him after a@ re: better and cheaper cabs. “UL Yo" writes: There is a youn) man of whom I'm very fond, and whi 4 “Well, I'm going to Gus's,” Mr, Jarv lups is a fake stock promoter, I I had found him only sual. cele ee Sa Ma tig him again, Then the 4 Hi F Sernenienersets Fides laos ive Eaten Ag heen 1 cure for people I like to give them |and if you are of J see no reason j almost had to laugh in the face of| «your faith In me has never been Would te. be aoe ene ee in w je socially wldle, thin ut he; why your marriage should not take! those r Sticklebacks, believing ” c! lied, not waiting| twenty that he would be loc! ? ; its From Sharp W its. may need them to go our bail when | wo: ‘suys only | place. pdt ce . Justified,” Jack replie 4 ked away, from me? I wonder if the man liv who knows how the tendrils af | they were in real society!” “A. 0." writes: “Will you please tell| “And did you see how Mrs. Beagle me the meaning of the letters ‘R. 8.' got an attack of nerves when she vee thought we might tell the Sticklebacks the truth about the whole of them?" ‘asked Mrs, Jarr. for me. “It will be,” Mr. Flam answered firmly. “Now we must hold a coun- cil of three and decide what is to be done, what is best. Susan has de- veloped into a wonderful business | woman, since you have been Are responsible for ma: all the things that we think we might | We wet in jail along with some of the; 4 cheap sport takes presents from @ Ww you think about it? have done Would have turned out so | very best people.” yen leet the ine ete Mina mae well t may seem to us that they | Having made this declaration of in- | ¢’ Ml or woman to make gifts of Jewelry to es dependence, Mr. Jarr started out toleach other unless they are enguged. Gus's place. it Mra. Jarr was rather relieved that! heart cling about the m she loves, no matter how badly may have failed him in other ways I was glad that I had insisted upd: returning to Mrs. Burns, In New Yor I passed unnoticed; while in a si beard of a young couple ment Upoe the flood of advice given them by the clergy, press and people? _ Milwaukee Hentinel ele of a French . tes “Please re- ® person never need of some Many realizes his things until he sees but you should c ‘ h put off unti| tem Advertised.Albany Journal, — (he went. She was expecting a aly ‘And then the two ladies Me most my right hand,’ I tell pines TMA She perrace, everything uf bt bd us an hour in y ov a ‘ fo-morrow is often crowded out by , iy, ae rom Clara Mudridge-Smith, and the} +, writes tleman derful!” Jack threw me| great, throbbing New York, I wi ment tasks of to-day.—Albany |, ,I¢ looks as If the average woman's! things she wished to say about the) been paying m lon a lady, 4 | tearing thelr acquaintances to pieces) “suo le wonderfull”, Jack pee BA RRL [idea of a happy demise in to be |ieagien and Col. Billups and thejand t Uke him very much, He {Indy should ask « gentleman to call. Yor the bond of their great friend-| @ loving smile, oe Ne fall thy ings) MD te Ona ot many musdieds Le oO eat in ¥ it ves me ‘rect? 4 a a of neglect. ro! d—Memphis Commercial Aepect [Countess Hazoo would have done Mr. | me tual Re ity tleman should ask the *H/P was that Clara Mudridge-Smith | ,y9;, viewing all that had happened independent women workers. Tho’ ingle made necessary Jarr had strong dislikes in end bis willingness met casually rarely showed any curl. osity concerning m: from the ne’ by Jack's retu ee jon or the lady's mother and M jarr too much good to hear, him. J w | Don't marry him untt . ere Wi Monday cannot be abolished, ‘The| Just now charity begins at home| Mr, Jarr was going into Gus's him to call, common, bY vive himself up. drawing back of skirts, no “tl am belt 8 thing to do is to work for its|and goes abroad.—-Deseret News, a siete ‘i “] do not anticipate any trouble] ter than you" attitude, ul itt, —Toledo, BI de. at ae oa, meee ae What Is a Slave? Copsright, 19 The Eyes abtiins Co, By Sophie Irene Loeb. excepting with Hed Somers, bl way at ait $hoean na OASIS: wu, 0. i X the kind of| things that would be of doubtful ben. “4 hat makes woman aj tles the question of a lifetime on the} ways: ' of an hou rs thankful for. Comparative youth, Buck for hls tiv. left to us, how much better it would ¢ ¢ OMAN will never be free speaking, Of NMAuit and no wction | spur-of the moment. a | “she is @ slave who can spend a dol-| “He has every right to be,” Jack}abundant health, children, mother P place.—-Galves-|be to repeal, from day to day, this in America, until every | {41 just} This girl awakens then, after she) lar but cannot earn one. leave Mary protested. Youtleus te and a loving husband, als simple sentence of gratitude: “Thank inl is taught how to) w la to-day. will go to] has left the shelter of She is a slave who lives in chained) “Can Jack stay here, Susan? I I might not be with my huse Nght Ph . Ree you, God, that we can help those who £ ‘k, given some trade MAT Nay fail in love, get mar- a luxury, envies the working girl, but|don’t want it known that he has re-| band, To-morrow I should see him, Not! are down."—Toledo Blad turned until he talks with my lawyer.| but perhaps not again for another i No, wait a minute, J'll have Banks] weary time. But it would pass as t! at my house to-night.» As soon as it|h, Once more Jack would take is dark 1 will come for Jack, and we] the battle of lif he can decide What is best to do with-| had righted the d shoulder to shoulder, heart ta and then pe has not the cotirage to be like her. She is a slave who insists that her house be immaculate at the expense of comfort. She is @ slave wh till believes the worn theory that "woman's work is never done.’ oy profession which will|Tied, have bables, and guarantee her economic independence, | NII some sympathetic “We have heard much about the!’ ‘phere are thousands like her, She ‘immorality of the parasite wife, who beauty: I woke ahd found that life was duty.” Yet her mother had made her realize that there was sume duty to perform in childhood, maldenhood and wifehood, besides looking beauti- Th is willing: take the bliss but not sting any more time than is|T; it up with a | jm dependent on her husband for food | the burder ries for out wai Dp ‘Ife wh Would you like to coms Sent PiLetters From the Feapie| better ans she looks And | be- p Bave “Kage” Was “Deck Hawk.” (and made off with it southward, This Pe tes Réttor of The Evening W ia very probably the same bird that _ fcur recent article entitied “Fagle your photographers snapped * about at Lunch 200 Feet Above "90M on the Municipal Building, as |the pleture you show is one of that Row" was very tuteresting to! species of birdy, and was not an —? shortly before noon on eagie, | have noticed repeatedly a me day 1 saw two peregrine | pair of these birds along the Pall- (commonly called duck) *04¢s and last year the; there. This duck haw DIA. open. the Met haw," as he is very ag the hawk tha me ‘ee com- t the and clothes and shelter. Neve that condition of affairs to be utterly wrong. But what alternative has a married woman who bas been taught nothing? “Instead of marrying at eighteen or nineteen, she should have been given the years of business or professional training which her brother ‘Then, married or unmarried, would be free.” ha upon herself as a martyr of mar- riage. ‘The trouble is not so much with Mary but with ber mother, It begins away back when Mary a ttle j girl; when her guardians reared her in the belief that she was something vather (han to set to She was taught to lean, from the very beginning; and the clinging ‘ine ja rooted in the variot tages. rule, work is only the inter the time she is eligible as ful and having a good time; at it with such sterling qualities she could have rned something that 1 back on in the way (a work or trade to her then she would not have could livelihood liking), Waste a <EEEEEEEEIETS CORI cmene ee She is a slave who rears her chil- dren so that they need her every min- is a slave who follows the too, Mrs. Flam would gladly take care of you, I'm sure.” ‘thought I detected a peculiar note jin his voice, and was positive of it when I noticed the relieved look on his face when I declined his invita- tion, No, 1 will remain her I told cena and longs she or 9 "You will talk more freely; it be better, I'm sure. ay at hella him. ry heart, with him, instead of hi pering a bye nad in the past. - io the night wore away. When it the gray dawn Fiereed wie of light, pre: , I took my bath, myself carefully and sat down to When Mary brought my breakfast o¢ 7 o'clock, as usual, I forced myself eat every bit 6 had scarcely res moved the tray when I heard

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