The evening world. Newspaper, December 12, 1914, Page 8

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ts The Evening World Daily Magazine. Saturday. December 12, 1914 , 1 a - ” . Che Miorld. ESTABLISHED BY JOBEPH PULITZER. Published Daily Except Munday by the Prens Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to “ * Kow, New York. OH RM TU MW nicer ss bar hems a A . low, JOsEPN PULITEEN, Jr, Mocretary, 6 Park Row, WHOM TO INDICT. HE motorman and conductor of the wooden car local train that ran into a wooden car express on the Ninth Avenue Elevated Wednesday evening, killing two persons and injuring fifty others, are in the Tombs charged with manslaughter, Proceedings against them will take the usual course. ‘They will be found to have + Wiolated rules under stress of special circumstance—and acquitted. All of which will be no great harm. The responsibility pat upon * $2.60 a day men is ont of all proportion. The first person to indict is neither motorman nor conductor. Nor is it August Belmont or President Shonts or General Manager Hedley or any other of tho high officials who run the Interborough with such latitude as they © ate allowed. __ Firat blame for any wooden car tragedy that may occur on sub- ‘way or elevated lines reats upon the Public Service Commission, whose pattiouler, peculiar and pressing duty it is and has been to sce that peblic gets proper protection from city railroad corporations in whape of safe service and up-to-date cars. If using steel cars strengthening the elevated structure, then why wasn’t it and steel cars demanded? The Public Service Commis ‘mist answer for the consequences of such accidents as the one > e¢ One Hundred and Sixteenth Street. ‘The real man to indict is Chairman Edward E. McCall. a "FEDERAL OFFICIALS IGNORE CRIME? &F % tae ry ARRYING and swindling trusting women by means of matri- y monial advertisements and subsequent correspondence seems « te strike United States Postal and other Federal authorities as not enough of a crime to bother about. ' The case of Von Wagner, alias Edelman, alias Mucller, who mar- y ried fear women at different times in Illinois and New York, staying | 13 with each only long enough to get her savings into his clutches, is a | a plain instance of deliberate, systematic swindling. Yet Federal crim- ii inl offieets have not lifted « hand. : In issuing a warrant for Von Wagner's arrest, Recorder McGov- , Do the Federal authorities regard it ao no business of theirs that © clever réscal is still at large, free to continue his crimes against cred- _ lows women with the help of the United States Post Office? A MODIFIED MORMON. HB eighty-two years of Joseph Smith, President of the reorgan- ~ feed Church of the Latter Day Saints, who died in Missouri { # : i : Smith, founder of Mormonism and father of tho lo hee just ended, wzpopalarity and persecatian, with occasional ij : 71 H E Smith of the reorganized Church was againet that his father ever eanctioned it. With the great H on, hae always felt iteehMf morally bound to shudder at a itd tf novelties of the season, polygamy is very bringing bitter strain and stress into the of young wives and husbands. Polygamy or no polygamy, we have to admit that the Mormons in tedeemed « barren land, built up great industrial community il} * foves with which the country has time and again had respectfully to non-polygamous offshoot of the old Mormon stock, whore take us away beck to the prairio days of the Middle HE tramped with his followers |varied strong men who are coemingly | Clliptical leds, as “Little Archie,” in| later on to be used as a night lamp| went ep from the howss, Apa when) rye told everybody that I want it!” poscasccies .fiallbemans eta ans lial heated tReet tatiana 1844, be was finally chot by a mob at Car. |7'te say theatrical production thet ts whe went to Utah under Brigham Young, however, | sight seats had been given away. | when he exhibite his good-looking— long period of abnegation his old aunt of order and thrift and made themselves « close, compact |th» fur trimmed overcoat ane siartal ttle prementtion in- tlme for dinner, cs a ne What Every Woman Thinks By Helen Rowland Guprright, 1016, by The Prem Publichiag Co, (The New York Evening World). As to Man’s Passion for “Playing Santa Claus.” \T do you want most in all the world?” inquired the Bachelor, @icking the ash from his cigarette, and watching the Wigewe eyes warily trom the corner of his own, as he paced nervously up and down before the fire, sé “Happiness!” ahe answered, laughing softly. - “But there isn't euch a thing in the WORLD!” protested the Backeler, Ginging bimself impatiently into the inviting arm-chuir, “and, besten, 1 t do you want Santa to bring you, for inatance™” ~~ “Oh, THAT!” The Widow looked disappointed, “Well, I want—bet ty, ten’t of the least use to mention it, I won't GET it! It's a new rug tor my motor eat,” she added illogically. A “But, why won't you get it—if you want it?” inquired the Bacheter; emil- ing aheeatly with secret satisfaction, as he thought of the amall velvet in his ‘pocket. ae “Becaves,” said the Widow, gravely, “I've TOLD everybody that I want it, Nothing could be more fatal. Did you over notice what funy things men are?” whe added irrelevantly. ~ > { Where the “Surprise” Comes In. = § ood 1 Bachelor moved uncomfortably in his chair and shifted his leather pumps to @ less conspicuous position. ed “We aren't exactly objects of art,” he admitted, in an injured tone, “1 mean about their Christmas shopping,” interrupted the Widow. “A taan’s idea of making & woman perfectly happy, for instance, ts to go to all ‘sorts of pains and subterfuges to find out everything she wants—and@ then Duy Ner something different, that she never even thought of wanting—just to “strpriee” her. He simply cannot resist his passion for playing Santa Claus, and fairy god! nh “Ok, Well, men will be boys, you know!" remarked the Bachelor cynloalty. “And women must be martyrs,” sighed the Widow. “But there ts hoth- on earth that a man so much enjoys as ‘doing the unexpected.’ A woman gets anything she wants, when she wants it, in this world, from a to a telephone message—if a man happens to SUSPECT that ‘The only way to get a man to do anything is to make him believe the last thing in the world you ever thought or his 3; and the te get anything you want for Christmas is to leave it off your jist ’ A wife may make out a list including everything from a botdoir 1 You Never Can Tell «viata: By Maurice Ketten | WOULDN'T BLAME Hit, ion abe - SHE N IMPOSSIBL! CREATURE... nf NO. | DON'T Like TIRE PIFFLE. 1 DON'T KNOW HER HUSBAND BuT | FEEL SORRY FOR HIM SHE HAS SUCH AN UGLY DISPOSITION... SHE HAS NO MANNERS. i You CAn’T BELIEN A WORD SHE SAYS . SHE TALKS Too MUCH | Mmousine, for which she is necretly yearning: and her husband will g : WHATS THe p) Next THe You WANT To " “j a @lance over it and thén go joyously out and spend his precious time’ and Meo pare |) Asoutine. Srmrar aee area Sco Pe ty oe Dow"rYou know ne 2) | PONT co fa ine THEATRE gt nis Pun eS RGR a oy Ea eeetee . Hi 7 rie ty Hu | AN TELL “Well,” protested the Bachelor lamely, “it isn't the gift; it's the-er— WORD soo SAI WHO CAN HEAR | | | thought, you know" — ida divsigte te " “Yes,” rejoined the Widow quickly, “and that’s what hurts! If a man ever THOUGHT before buying a woman's Christmas present, he would know that ehe would rather have a fifteen cent bunch of violets from geome one who remembered that violets were her favorite flower, than «wo dozen American beauties at $5 apiece from some one who DIDN'T remember her tastes ead desires. It's that delicate, delictous sensation of having been ‘thought about’ that thrills a womaa—but there! Men will never feara,” and ehe sighed again, pathetically. . ‘te [Whee He “Ought” te Like and wt THER will women, for that matter,” retorted the Bachelor, “Ever ince Sir Walter Raleigh first discovered tobacco women, have bees torturing their husbands with gifts of fancy cigars and pipes, tba! ‘wouldn't pull—and that, in spite of ridicule and anathema, tn all papers. Eve since the days of Beau Brumme! they have been with nightmares in the way of scarfs and hosiery that @ chap cas at the peril of his soul and the damnation of his reputation, but that hee ito wear for their eweet sakes or dic. Ugh!” and he shuddered visibly. “Lgever pase one of those windows that display cute little boxes containing gearfs, hose, handkerchicfs and suspenders to match, in all the color of a cpbiet's dream, that I don't pat myself on the shoulder and mutter, ‘Thank Heaven, you're a bachelor, old chap! Such things are enough to keep any man from e Mr. Jarr, In His Role of First lighter, “"Tte ihe Santa Claus Spirit in all of us, T suppose,” mused the Wieow. The Jarr Family Sees a “Maiden Martyr” Come to Grief. | Ztscmisirntars mcr nseotok (Bion soe fear By Roy L. McCardell 80 naturally you get him something ELSE. But Cupriight, 1914, ty The Prow Publishian Co, (The Now York Krening World), When this child was dragged be- front of the in the sperting columns of the Bve- mmotpe rues ont eee like that, nights?” ning Toga, an old Roman sheet long hy in,” whispered the Widow, leaning forward in the firelight, “and « since fs aj | TN tell YOU a secret that nobody else knows, A motor rug i suspended), a roar of approval! (01 “ining on earth that I can think of—that I DON'T west, That's wee ° “Funny for the woman—and sad for the man,” agreed the ‘. the role of Asparagus the Younger. 1 Nere’s bed (while the tyreat lay | “But tell me,” and he sighed unhappily, at the thought of the Meee ym theatre was one) terest evoked was at the entrance of | fore the implacable tyrant Nero to be blane of lights. he lobby was] little Halloway Bingle, the bow-|Goomed to be fed inflammables and awake to read the latest massacres /let lovingly tucked away in his breast pocket, “are you really dreaming of thronged with all the many an@| legged boy—billed, on account of his|then made to swallow a wick and ‘Beeded to draw salaries in connection “You witch!” breathed the Bachelor with delight and relief, as bé eur- So Wags the World - _ By Clarence L. Cullen fs | reptitiously patted his pocket. ne he mane Oe eetene emit ie Copgright, 2914, by The Prem Pabiishing On, (The Mow Xork Evening World), Be thought of the insults he would HERE'S something naively pa-) insurance clerk who for five years Reap on anybody whe tried te‘buy a thetic in the way a homely, pros- Seared, Bn semiene. teats Oe bigh seat at the box office—for all the fret perous raan preene bimselt| married on. At the very cod of this } 2 it: Chapters from a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond 4 Caperight, 1014, by The Frew Publishiag Co, (The New York Kvening Woetd), ‘ CHAPTER OXVIII, « bear their troubles patient); 4 HAD never been.» busy as| {ie @ blessing. 1 think ie. wilt bs I now was. Every moment] Wii keep sue free, Goat daughter, it was occupied, and. happily.| on your own sorrow, whish ye a I compelied myself to rise| #0 bravely enduring. fap hour earlier so tbat I could ac-| Pictures of the children you for. Th od plish the same amount of sewing | you, and, while thee ast Doe aoa I had been doing before I gave| artistically done as if a Ne ‘ire, Carmen my evenings. My chil-| Photographer had taken them, I oeet were strong and healthy, and Heer ee By ood. they _ tly were hard upon their) “79; the pretiy lady wen De gare: see my picture that I am time I spent with Mrs. Carmen) can't walk’ delight. I called it my “play-| tion of your eitae whiches ferred to Mrs. Carmen's 4 o thelr pictures.” was much more or aa ere ee of the story, a4 paid stronger, better or tere, it STAer Ausetimolitics. Her husband| pow, 7 Uf With Ite trials, ite ger. bp being urged by his party to run What lovely children!” Cie. lor Mra. f 8 zi ga ‘Mr, Hareld Dogstory wore his furjand perhaps everdressed—wite in Clara died and left him 9600,- overcoat negligently open tomhow his| public. Pulchritode by proxy is good) (0, He was so embittered over the correct theatrical evening attire. This |enough for him—and he revels in tt! | that good pang The man who overworks that “Live and Let live” saw, generally: has something in his own game that ruby studs, « stand-up collar, a bat!i. wants to keep dark. wing tle of and Mr. a? i i E i ft i H ii | i : anda Who's Stthee ated Dogstory al wi advance “possessing the for friendship” pshen aguirD wean? we, amble to th Seughter newly shined with stove "if not to extinot >0—| him breaking } | E i EEE +s 3 | F Ff i H $ carefully gone over by Tony Correct. parent panic Ms ntin anes black and ali the threadbare wife knows how to cook. blackened carefully. news|. When you're et twenty-one Z Be He if ily the per- % t i one,” but it mélanoboly ing when you're forty-five, say. ‘We know seven follow no-breakfast fad. ‘Theyre reel bo crabs during the ys i “7 iu from transporting over its lines products in which ft has any watil Seaattions, howls ana “a bist office, and she added her men exclaimed, looking first’ at ene \nterest. {human society, a: But, alas, aged en at the other, gorge so that for the rest nected appearance hey are sweet, Ge tor, as capi knows, efforts to prevent the geod tight pours they remind you of ti sprediaa a. pleased at hen teiae ed reitroad interests Bestera Pennsylvania from fixing the ore. mamas ways foll Pred in they are. May putes the consumer must pay cach month of the year for : ished friend whose society de ; re fort een) have come to naught. When the railroads were told ‘on Si ects taea fe daneies fisntea Ley Conzequentiy’ the pours are, my ear Guan, tam aoe sutst not deal directly in coal, they promptly organised coal # bounder he'd met somewhere, turned: and bolted from her, tearing Te happiness for me. Peet Sian hare they Bled ie ‘ 4 corporations, distributed the etock among the shareholders of throughout a five-hour py 7: "E can pever revey you A w I told her of mother, of i the railroad, fixed prices at the mines and continued as much 5 overhi parlor car because he forte love and care see 4 a {a contre! of the coal situation as ever. had predicted, the first rousing in-| We knew once, in San Francisco, an’ sees other drensed-up ruma doing it. . aan db eee naierenee the wan = Dati @ way ts found complete!y to separate coal mining - . “aq Ba ty ey a i from railroading coorumere ot this tndiepensadie commottty |Two Kinds of Friends w we she asked, folding Cae eee” of Will continee to be at the merey of one of the mest arrogant aie aa ob tbs baat Ad aoe teed ae amo" T retumed Took ‘st it again, “It te the hepacts ch a end tupregnadle combines that ever dictated prices. i other Gay 1 was © mom tinued. “A ' time go 1 hs “These t weet pore for me, than I can S22 ae See i & - whom very to return.” , ° Z ij Fs who had been in rather good circum- sally NPtthall never be reconciled,” | { cas tesre in hear aa = SG Hite From Sharp Wits stances, But, owing to various mean of thie t ; ; he replied, with 8 sigh, rch ‘ ae P fortunes, she became very poor; be- |g ‘re, Carmen had told me of her ac-| ai S ue e Mise to cay, ,4 a = vertently rea whe had others dependent on ne tt ry #0 Ry gong epprectare hie qugst. ; ot inet {ng that be aed to work his head off Tod. “Better times came for the wom, be eradi- pei. B, A a Balle nee art haxe them Lg : Toungntewa Pelegreis friends makes a ine Sowing Oot Ala witeread| Une lor tas che martes teres 2 Sa ° ereand Soh aaa? hecgle Seay want, to, Ber, Tend |sumehow she did not enjoy may fi 4 Fing her spine that sbe woul || my babies claaped to her Breaat ihe ¥ it were not for the men, women what they want when they want it, ehip for me to send. @hip, though I had known her in dire sive walk again. 1 could seo tnat/a song of thankagiving im my ‘3 be the most gossipy| with never a th it of wal Da- ontshed at this, and the| “After I had continued this for a|distress, I wus forced to agree finally | expect a return, he alll 4 ¥ maine. I was ast this knowledge wan one re: I wrote mother and LR ew on earth. —Columbia Btate. tently until they i 0] woman no doubt Rotiond my eur-|iong time she seemed to my|to he soramon beige ie ye toy ha sat he bas coutered jGon she urged him to enter public life.| send me some more ple * ‘ eee Blade , 3 av y my . he » ching, and cold w' mi a ° into pe it she paid me weekly, dc. tt j me on er Wie) sina in that aald of uppopu- \t. and be mace friends with them. Of) friends of sadness, : eynile obo, ke itr, Flam, cautioned cn Mies re Ne, ee A little self-denial a long lving.—Knoxville Jo f course they did not know her extreme |to choose the " ise uch as an: comrades of ifn Pe Fe tested all I know you will say,” of you around were in the great , nor they aware that y oooh the Rane also wrote: In a way I felt the uve gen Sn ree ry Se Pein Sane Gin Pey(akca ar S segciatie Rabe | ate: ana ele ae ae en ees tad": prone ine sesh Y Sek By dtc an Pa an ’ a pr

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