The evening world. Newspaper, December 15, 1914, Page 18

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: ; nS ta 4 stad alates il ich yey ais (a8 “4% fips - , nD ; The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, December 15. 1914 Reflections of > _ a Bachelor Girl} g RSTADLISHHD BY JOSEP PULITZER. _ Pedltened Dally Except Supdny by the Prose Publishing Company, Nos, 53 to ww, New York. ’ scabs Cua eek 1AM HAVING A 1AM GLAD LET NE T ts Not ny ANI BULLY Tine SIR Gu CONGRATULATE HE RTY, SiR. ie Pomona aie Tor tre Malti wal | It's Penrecrey (| YouuiKe™ ( | CONGRATS ! punter? LAM ONLY Re By Helen Rowland Ra ‘ay "Sada As gg bee mea DELIGHTFUL ~ ITS A GREAT Butter Copyright, 1014, by The Prew Putlishing Co, (The New York Brening Work), a i AL ie Ges es baat} Success : 66] OVE” is that strange illusion which makes a woman prefer sitting: home and listening to one man's criticism to going out and Hstes= ing to a lot of men’s flattery. ” . i If the stork has been supefseded by the dog-fancicr, and the darning needle by the typewriter, it may just possibly be because love-in-a-cottagg has been superseded by the bachelor-flat. . } | STUPID|]TY OVERRULED. 3 T*: people of New York are to lose nono of the benefits of the | public school lectures which were started years ago through) the efforts of The Evening World. When the Aldermen cut in half the usual appropriation for these: lectures this newspaper promptly voiced the protests of thousands of persona who have enjoyed and profited by them. ; The Mayor will veto the action of the Aldermen. As the motion to reduce the appropriation passed the Board only by a bare majority | there is no chance of securing the two-thirds majority necessary to | overcome the Mayor's veto. With his veto the Mayor should send a message making plain once and for all how the city feels toward this admirable educational | epportunity which packs the schoolrooms throughout the season with crowds of people who, much as they may like moving pictures, | Like still better a chance to listen and learn. The lectures are safe for next year. It is a pity that they should | ever have to be at the mercy of Aldermen whose idea of economy is to | find money for municipal extravagance by pooh-poohing and stinting | | 7 | Oh, yes, {t's quite possiblo for a woman to be both a sweetheart ant b wife to the same man—but not at the same time. pd ——— oe After five years of marriage, wearing all your best frills in order te j fascinate your husband is about as effective as giving a moving picture show for the blind. i} Marriages are like rarebits; each one is a brand new experiment; @ ‘no matter what your recipe, you never can tell the particular reason wi it turns out smooth or crumbles to pieces. ' Bachelof: A body of habits, bounded on the north by suspicion, on thé’ south by egotism, on the east by indigestion and on the west by a doting, mother. ' A man’s idea of displaying “resolution” appears to be first to find ous. what a woman wants him to do, and then to proceed “resolutely” not t do it. * Presence of mind in love making is a sure sign of absence of hearts” ¥ the public's instinct for self-improvement. | no man begins to be serious until he begins to be foolish. y) .¢e -— | | 4 me, After months of bread and water Wall Street is on ita beat | f Fe jousy never flies out of the window until indifference comes {n at behavior, The first equare meal finds it cheerful but | the door. * chastened. = ee ——- —-42————- yg WHY NOT FIVE-CENT BUSES? 1 motor omnibus having shown how much it can add to com- 1 First Aid to the Christmas Shopper and I know she will fort and convenience in getting about the city, New Yorkers are ready for more. Harlem is clamoring for buses, The Harlem Board of Com- merce has induced a bus company to extend its service on St. Nicholas _ Avenue, Seventh Avenue, Riverside Drive and Cathedral Parkway Buildings to the value of $3,000,000 are said to have been erected 66 Y money {s too hard earned market afford: M to spend on foolish trifies,”| be happy over pars remarked the practical which means she can sleep a little business woman. “I am purchasing |longer in the morning hereafter. all useful gifts this year.” Father will get the thermos bottle he @iJ has so often wished for. It will add ¥ Miss Sentiment quickly retorted.) + ‘his office comforts, For sister T “Christmas is tho one day in the years purchased leopard dur cloth to rene j when not a speck of sadness should/ovate her last winter's coat. This be | | along this route as a result of improved bus service. alee pate Ate stal Fy believe in tations of skins and Io #6 8 et Mid-Manhattan wants more buses, particularly to carry people day, and my gift is one means of | set id whitarwihes rat east and west. The company which operates the Fifth Avenue line 3 Cg ele at Balog totes tte Gif reat “Yesterday started a crosstown service from Firat Avenue west through { = Pesta Pn. Cea nAr ei ate pilght have “got a Ket in Seventy-second Street, south down Fifth Avenue, west again through . Q = } means. Whether the gift ix practical ie ‘ pat aaa ott ¥ and leh | Fifty-seventh Street to Broadway and north on Broadway to Seventy- RT TEE the. recipient: ad A stretching, my purseat consider. second Street. ‘ so doing am giving what littly joy % ; “a ; i can to one who has the right to be] “Among the white toilet no The Franchise Bureau of the Board of Estimate is at work this fi happy on Christmas Day Instead of found some new. pi month on elaborate plans to develop bum service throughout the city. Sup ppeutiee ane FP eREUD LCG NED HOV GE the aire Iw Two years ago The Evening World predicted that New Yorkers f . The Christmas Shopper averted an, shaped ae ree at would acquire the bus habit with a rapidity that would revolutionize en y \ s exceptionatl | surface transportation in the upper sections of Manhattan, whore the = aisealven (bay | atk: Gant eras tee iT there’s mother. cover to protec: avenues are especially fitted for bus service, “Already companies are eagerly seeking new franchises to cover this district. % BIC PEI | She's been worrying over the diMculty! there are t SSS EE SS EE 8 8S to Keep the polished Moors in perfect, rors A Whiff of Christmas Hits the Jarrs Seong of thous new. washable mops, ‘and. at the atu eute a valk | together with the oil box—the best the of two small hatpins ¢ nd a vell Pia. Ten Days in Front gf Schedule Time | z . Meanwhile the public makes generous use of the buses and pays »\ thousands of dimes daily to ride in them. | ©. Jn view of the value of the franchises and the certainty of steadily The Jarr Family Tncreasing patronage, why should it cost téy cents to ride in a motor AALLALAAAAAARAAAAAALARSAANSASS SAAS | ~ * By Roy L. McCardell > bus in New York a distance that would cost but two cents on a similar It was Gertrude, the light running humble opportunities to deliver! bus in London? Copyright, 14, W The Prom Puldishing Co, (The New York Evening World) domestic, who caught them at their | homilies), Shame on you two, Shame HEN the kage addressed to room, Then they slipped quietly in-|Prying. Gertrude was aggrieved. She | on you two. And right before Christ- | Jarr arrived, side and loosened the string and took | 8@id #0, Chapters from a Woman’s Life y Dale Drummond Before the city hands out any more precious permits for the use Mr mas, Don’t you know this is the time | 3 a 2 Copyright, Wis, by dhe row Hubiishing Cy, x wf the streets it should insist upon a flat five-cent bus fare or rates “Don't open till Christmas,” | a childish survey of what was in the] “Now, you BAD little onteren, Jwhen all little children should be CHAPTER CXIN. to Hailes. ¢ i : ; ; Jarr had just time to turn tie] package marked “Not to Be Opened |cried Gertrude (who was much like) obedient? If they ain't obedient then hte LEN : valked. T was arying with distance. New York is far too carele as as to what it gets) cierscription so Mr. Jarr could | il ORPatiS AG, you and me in that she improved her| good, kind, gentle Santa Claus comes last t had Mme. Loraine | fi behets ate 4 had | done 8a in seturn for the valuable street privileges it confers, neo hor, as he arrived at the door just saat verre ne Fddwn the chimney and whips them | paid up. As 1 held fe is ; a as thé delivery man was departing. | Ts H . with switches and puts soap and pep- ceipt in full in my band 1} 1 1 was hurrying by, when & oe ‘This year the Citizens’ Union wants fewer Ald ana “eon getting things for the kids?" W it, Wisdom and Philosophy per on thelr tongues, because Santa made a vow never again | holding. ove heel My oP wl fants Sewer Aldermen. Las| asked Mr. Jarr. . " “Baronet,” applicable to any one fa-| Claus loves little children.” | to run in debt for clothes. TS. ae you do . \ ¥> year it wanted no Aldermen at all. Flattory for the present Seiden Se RNR OHNE MANNERS AND FASHIONS. Jyored by woah « interest or party | Having thus Impressed upon Master! “No uso erying over spilt milk!" L VIA yonrabaney abe sae me Board? Saat toy ola hat L haa downtown By Herbert Spencer. fooling. Knighthood hus #0 far ceased Willie Jarr and his little sister the|said to myself, as I put the recotpt ? wd ————2 901 being remodelled.” v the spirit of} f ITLES of address and modes themecivés by deciining Tt. Not only tender side of Santa Claus's beauti- | carefully away, “But, thank Cod.) | Tehaee “nian sintiaoate MODERNIZE THE ELEVATED cheerful falsehood is abroad in the | of salutation, bearing about!do titles and phrases and salutes cease ful ature, Gertrude resumed her di- | that's Beate ote at {stan a ppointment,” , land in pre-holiday times. them, as they do, something | to fu their original function, but! dactics. ‘And it Is sneaky to look at} And I did thank God, for now after! “Come into this tea room and have ‘ ile, deer kissed her and she burried of the servility which marks) (22, Whole operation of socal forins| things that are not yours, eapecially|# few small bills were paid I should) © Cp of tea with me, dot h out to the dining room ahead of him! their gin, become dis-| inal purpose—the facilitation of social] When you are told not to!” continued be free to put ay all, excepting the airaid [ haven't time, ee nk. ter the hee | » somehow, [~in ap! living : hate of my embarrassment, wa planning when Jack should be she asiced. enh wane oe “Please come,” she returned, follow her into the cozy Soom! sitting on a high backed 4 ee investigation of operating methods sanctioned by | Mt: 4arr ke Interborough officials on elevated lines is due the public, and had time to warn the children |tsteful in proportion as they become | intercourse, | she. “And it is very wrong and bad If motormen are taught to run trains from the motor|and Gertrude, the light-running do-{more independent themaelves and} ie it yy in hat oikee of social ob-|t@ tell flbs) So you two run out of box of the third or fourth car, if local trains carry no signal lamps, mastic, not to say who the package [sympathize moro with the indepen-|servance comprehended under the] the room quietly, and I'll tie up the was for, denee of others, The feeling which} term Fashion that the process of cor-| bundle so no one will ever notice it's “had always been—essentially a domestic animal, L loved my hus: | band, my children, my home, That if employees go uncensured when they take a chance with a broken | siurtermore,” Mrs. Jarr explained (Makes the modern gentleman tell the |TUPtION Is seen with the greatest dis-| heen touched; and if your mamma sus-| {had blundered sudly, been extrava-|Vench, we were screened trom the, fown motor—a chance that may involve the safety of a th®usand pas-lto the children, “Santa Claus has so |Mborer standing barcheaded before | Nakeee A tigg te with man-| cpects you I'l tell her you weren't| gantly wicked, did not alter the fact.] °Uler people sitting about, é sal rs . 7 , “ * ght of he I, alone, ‘y about Ned jue.” she sengere—then it is high time for people to kuow the full scandalous | much to do this year on account of him to put on his hat, the feeling|relation to other persons, Fashion| near the room, And now run out, and Pe ce tee AA etn OM after ordering the tea am A i 6 the war in Kurope that he ts sendiag| Which gives us a dislike to those who | dictates our minor acts in relation to} I'l tie the bundio with my oyes shut, ‘wish wa would all be tomst a estent to which the Public Service Commi Pe head of time, So(cringe and fawn, the feeling which |OUrselves. | While manners originate in whic yuld all be toget : i i by Imitation of the behavi 9d | #0 T won't know what ts in it!” made me very huppy. > its responsibilities and-@ozes over its dut Wo must lay aside all weak curiosity [makes us alike assort our own digulty |toward the great, Fashion originates! . The children tiptoed out, and Gor-| Oh, how closely I planned! T would a Whatever criminal carelessness is revealed in every day railroad. | O° Mle inquisitiveness and be sure not jand respect that of others, the feeling | by Jaltavton ee the Behavior ith? trude examined the contents of the|#&V@ save every penny until nearly ‘4 rs i os 7 | c 7 bat hich thus di great, le ¢ one has its deriva- ok: lke customs ing) or be- | ing practices on the Interborough, however, two facts remain, Thy even so much as to try to gue hat/which thus leads Us more and more package like a customs { r WENA TEAC A little pines Bowewbete ‘e sorry than I can tell on shuts ite eyes, shirks oni jends again in spite, of it, Sue? L have wanted to tell roe for a long time how much to blame T felt for much that has happened. & know | encouraged you (o be e@x+ time for Jack to be released, when [ th , {a Inja package that is mai at{ta discountenance all forms and! ised Aotineneiin Bowen ihe ornare fore tying it up again. and furnish it. elevated will never be as safe as it ought to be——as safe ay up-to-date | to be opened till Christmas,’ names which confess inferiority and|derived from those in power. Mrs. Jarr remembered she had for-| A few weeks passed and T was _ knowledge can make it—until it has (1) steel cars throughout and| 8° ying sho slipped into her pou- submission, te the sam3 fecling which Hy and by, however, Fashion cor-|gotten to lock her closet, and Mr.| The last obligation which I ni doir and put the package in tho bot.|fealsta despotic power and Tnaugu-|rupting lke these other forms of rule) jary might chance upon the bundle| Handle had. dent met ttt One| travagant, to do. many. thingy you, 4 rOV' it almost wholly ceases to b finita- 42) a block signal system. tom of her closet, but not before #ho |", Penuihe GOTeTOHen! $08 fon of the best and becomes an lini. {and open and see what was coming! I felt so happy the night after i joy but T didn't Why lavish improvements and safety devices on the subway alone? | had lifted the vell—or rather shifted! “Another fact akin to the foregoing | tation of quite other than the best, | to him Christmas, had m my first deposit toward aj t Wont r my share in t some instda| is that these several kinds of govern-|A® those who take orders are not| But she needn't have worried, Mr,| home that Mrs, Carmen remarked it. ave been too proud to ai ther, but|those having a special fitness for the] yar had tipped the delivery man at sutaeeies I told her, then ex- irway to give!” sh vhy th rapping as to Jf we are going to keep the elevated at all why not insist that it be safe neetae pee what the packuge| ment not only decline to according to the standards of this century : priestly office but those who see thelr st : lig not last? contained. prrupt together, Hy the same process | i vto living by It, us legislators and! the bottom of the si neg wey ehtaed with me and then|, “If T have had anything to forgive it has been forgiven and forgotten: Iking about Emelie. a —— | At the dinner table Mastor Willie} place not for the administration of|Public functionarles do not become|him a private peep. began i : 3 | gc pointedly: incited the wrath of his| justice, but for tho withholding of it; |auch by virtue of thelr political In-| It was as he suspected, for he had) of want you to bromine me tine lone T have fad too manyaaae | t | e process do title: isle! . he self- onthe « " | when yoo a oro > Hits From Sharp Wits [uttle sister by telling her there was | 0%, tila SRM, Dioceee Te meaning [elected “clique who ‘set’ the fashion aaked everybody not to—Mra, Clara) Korrow her for a few days, will your” ily " ies to| and a power become empty forma. gain this prerogative not by their) Mudridge-Smith wag sending him a — «indeed 1 will,” I replied. "And ae |no Santa Claus to bring dy Those who walk in the ight and jage in the absence of danger.—Nash- M Sto te ducting | Couts-of-arins, Which served to dis-|force of nature, thetr intellect, their| fearful and wonderful example of! know you will love her. She ts ve Tow path do not have to mend | ville Banner, | kood Httle girls that the little darting | |) ONO onlin battle, now figure on| higher worth or better taste, but gain|that horrid apparatus that women| d gentle and never gives any | their ways. F z e e ° threw her scrambled eggs right at the carriage panels of retired grocers, | it solely by thelr unchecked assump-|puy to impose upon their men folks, a But for the collar putton's habit of | her brother. Once a badge of high military rank, | tion, . un F p ir men | After. receiving my promise she } man will insist on drawing bis] roiling under the dresser some men| So they were both sont from the|ihe shoulder knot has become on the, And thus life a la mode, instead of/# “Made in Germany” gimerack | would have no reading music, | aie exclalmed wiadly own conclusion who would) never) would never wet any exercise Ray modern footman a high mark of servi-| being life conducted in the most ra- smoking set! but lay looking at Emelie’s picture, Sut you must think of drawing the plans for his ry lle tude, The name “Bannerot vhich| tional manner, is life regulated b: » Ge: pout her tastes and plannini own house—Deveret News, whie e' y It is these German atrocities that) asking about h Pp a ° When & man comes to know how They walked away, wailing loudly, | ance marked a partly created "Baron,”! spendthrifts and {dlers, milliners and have turned the sympathies of so| what she do to make her ‘Then, again, it ia the fellow who| little he knows he Is beginning to until they got outside their her's ison under the modification of tailors, dandies and silly wo many American men to the allies, bappy, tt on eultyl, anna et woes fishing for compliments who| make progress | toward acquiring be . ths By Sophie I it could bring at her command, pla Seis the most rebulta—Piitaburgh Foledo Blas He, She and the Dog we we (eet tates, ) re) we y Sophie Irene Loeb ning wnat she would do for a BOR. " mien — | OW child! e . ° “Betting form of nervousness,” | " ‘i ecasion- , child very i si re trie ‘ e " 1K other night T attended a;ed) t © and go forward occasion- ,children, Almost every one contrib- ns and unemployment and suffer-| IT met Mildred Somers again one are frien Now let ull those who have in- [saya a doctor, Move to amend. It'na | Ti Wehatiaus rperforciance (0 ce ieeewicr to get a view of the/Uted, but when the woman in biack [ing a litte. children, RIGHT | day when I was walking up the ave-| Really every one was too kind t ( gisted that charity begins at home cause. Leys iF JB. GPRS Was approached she waved them)HERE IN OUR MLDST—an appeal] nue. It was a lovely fall day and I/me. My eyes tilled with ‘ears a '@ome to the ront.—-Indianapolis ald starving ebild performance, aside, shaking her head in a bored, |/so strong that it would have melted| thought a brisk walk wo ‘d do melresumed my walk, tar. One never takes all the courses in A woman came in dressed} The man had done this several) plage manne: A_ friend who was!a heart o! good, So instead of taking the car (To Be Continued.) the curriculum of the School of Ba-! jy g decollete black evening gown,| times, 1 don't know what Sin-Sin} with me, one of New York's best) Yet this jewel bedecked woman, ——— — bE Se y eo 28 ‘There is usually a display of cour- ! perience.-Philadelphia Inquirer, leading a dog by & chain, The hand | (the dog) thought of the performance, i known philanthropic women, having wish lmipesesive features 80 A ral sympathy in favor of| them on account of thi ee Ch 4 ae syndy al a ra boa of dass | that hold the chain wax covered with | but he wasn't very happy In his chair Yhat w there about a woman andjcould not leave it with servants : for other behavior that in ‘deok { ierto gems, A man, presumably|and many times struggled to tree}a dog that creates the element of {while sho attended an evening per- ised breuch of the fitness of things, es | usband, followed the woman and| himself while the couple were away |selfishness and a disregard of. litile formance, sat stony and untouched When EVERY self-respectin, person her Ve ‘They were seated pees me— | from their seats, ‘children? The dog seems to take the |when asked to give a wee mite to umes such an attitude, then the dos, the woman and the man, I Toward the end of the programme | piace of some child, and AT THE |help some poor little human 'Z Letters From the People y back t seat, PENSW of that child.” 1 ind. F. ©. A. ter Brooklyn Bridge. day and night. I have seen drivers’ mention the dog first because he was| turned to the dog and sald: “A nuts i | waht to dumb brutes; and pet anim: is ha Editor of The Evening World | put ropes around horses’ necks to get given the best chair. sance, isn't It, Sin-Sin? and then sat| If you had been at this entertain-| HAVE THEIR PLACE and their ap. juts out human sympathy, plain about the | them to -ull & heavy lad, and attach" The woman tied the dog to the|Duck with folded hands, resignedly, |ment with thie woman and the dog,|peal, But when women forget Such women should be made to/on the wane. The anima will 0 rear of another wagon. I) ry iT have heard the report sweetness and stronger 4 of that they owe something to) RIGHTFUL place, certainion pave stopped them several times snd Oey, one ae Hee vince wae. baal sale ‘wie over ‘Bur ne ine evening fade there by responaible people os hile eagren, ond sar, the een and. gutere, race, ss nots by all the Isws of pa oman, ection was ie deploi conditions; jtatio- their suffering, Wek MW

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