The evening world. Newspaper, January 7, 1915, Page 16

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ESTABLISHED BY JOSHPH PULITZER. Prese Publishing Company, Nos. 53 to Dat scent Supany by fhe Pree Fuvjining Compas hence The“ Mrentng] For. Basian Clase Matter. tes to and the Madnat end for the United States All Countries In ~ and Canada, Postal es International lon. oe 80.78 sees ae IT MAY HAPPEN AGAIN. OM the worst accident the subway has yet seen, from the suf- ferings of hundreds of half-suffocated people who narrowly y eacaped death, from a day of crowded hospitals, disordered busi- He and demoralized traffic, New York has made up ite mind © (1) That even though no flames broke out, etifling acrid smoke ¢ subway could kill thousands before help reached them. | (%) That to lock suffocating passengers in a halted train with doors and windows is a hopeless means of allaying panic among} human beings. | (8) That to keep on selling tickets and crowding the subway ber a tie-up is criminal. @ That darkness ie the most panic-producing horror that can | any mishap of any sort in a tunnel. | Tt may be years before insulation of electric cables can be made/ or short circuits be obviated. What happened to wires in . subway yesterday may happen again. Meanwhile: More emergency exits to the street. Lights that can ded on whatever else fails. Vente and fans that will quickly smoke from any section of the tunnel. “Above all, stop the barbarous practice which now prevails in case P it of locking people in trains and jamming more on the plat- imstead of promptly finding means to get everybody out. Tf there had been some way of communicating from train to some system of throwing open all doors, windows, surface ven- and exits, some attempt to treat alarmed passengers like Deings instead of cattle, there need have heen little panic or ring in the eubway yesterday. a Sn RISING SPIRITS. PSHE biggest order for steel rails the market has seen this twelve- month is announced by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The road will buy immediately 150,000 tons, which is 18,000 tons more all it bought in 1914. The New York Central is getting prices 00 tons and is certain to want more later. With these two big I setting the pace, others are sure to figure more confidently come forward with substantial orders. 4 the rise of spirits in railroad circles following the Interstate Commission’s grant of an advance in freight rates, would show iteelf in renewals of equipment and a widening of oper- was a foregone conclusion. There is every reason, however, spirit should not stop with the railroads but keep right on. > Business throughout the country has formed the habit of watch- }the railroads and the steel industry. The railroads are cheered Me Consequently the steel industry is going to be. ) Let business, therefore, drop the anxious eye attitude and fall to, watchword for January, 1915, is: Replenish, Expand, Expect, EEN A SRS RRA EE N WITH NEW YORK ITALIANS. MERICAN-ITALIAN educators, professional and business men, have incorporated themselves as a Union League of Italian-American citizens of the United States. The aim of 3 is to promote good citizenship. |. Here in New York it is to be hoped this excellent organization H make a special effort to raise citizenship standards among a class Hian residents that causes the city grave anxiety. New York is of its Italian population. It appreciates Italian thrift, honesty endurance. It applauds the distinction in art and science which have won here. ie | One of the best detectives New York ever had was an Italian ‘was murdered while serving the city overseas, | Nevertheless conditions which he fought atill persist among his p here. Blackmail, bomb-throwing, Black Hand opera- Just now appallingly prevalent, are traced oftenest to Italian The tendency of New York Italians generally to maintain silence concerning menacing letters and bomb outrages the task of handling crimes of this class exceedingly difficult d | Who should éftive to remove this stigma from New Yor’s Italian n, who should watch and labor with incoming immigrants, | should persuade the ignorant that Black Hand crime can never ht with fear and silence, if not educated and Americanized of Italian birth? May the new League show first zeal along lines. harp Wits It te not only more biessed to gt than receive, Hits From 8 ‘Mickel to charity ts cheap oint- eore conscience , a8 earch ng ass LJ seh b ta ‘ weather Knonvilie Journal d Da The Jarr By Roy L. Copyright, 1915, by The Pres Mublishing spread himself on the sofa. “Why, no," replied Mr. Jarr inno- cently. “Want me to go out and get) you something?” Mra, Jarr thought of the ball tickets the deceiving wretch had in the inside pocket. His air of innocence did not deceive her. “Oh, yes, you ARE going out!" re- marked Mrs, Jarr, cantly. "I beard that man Ri whistle for you not a moment ago. Mr. Jarr had forgotten all about the ball tickets to the benefit dance of the Hum the shipping him Inte buyin, even forgotten the implied threat that had forced the sale, the threat that Fatima, Frits's professionally fat r, might pay a octal call to get acquainted with Mrs, Jarr, But sensed hostilities in Mra. Jarr’s ton “Hub?” be q led. “I thought if I enrolied as a Prohibitionist on New Year's you weren't going to fuse with about anything? am Rot say word Let your) conscience do that?’ eniffed Mra.) \Jarr, “And to think could kiss) | your children good al ‘That you could sit at the table and talk pleas. antly with me about the awful way Clara Mudridge-4mith carried on your friends, why, go ahead and ea- 0 t , but you can in & pretty fair | of what sort of Just from those | phia Inquirer ° e e Piatruet that dosen't discriminate originates tn narrow minds. tnost by thoes on things Philadel. p make the world Macon Tele you want to start ot Whoeve: Joes anyt te Bo evils ned, and man the landlord 10) joy yourself!” | “They're vot ae bad as | trie retorted Mre least they don't ask me to leave home and family et aight to go out with @ wretch like that man Kangie'” amt with the Hie mind could YOUR “at wn forty yholiem, you'd better jer Don't speak to me! totiered awey Ms, Jose cighes, but be and not say @ word || “0 an unequal and she mr) [seer seca‘, iyi ba By Maurice Ketten }, 1915, i By Helen H, YES, a girl can read a mat the bright lights of Broadwa: frivolous nature, Even a modern husband fiatters with his shoes in his hand when he ‘him properly. “Horse | | RS, FIDGETS winked her left | eye furiously, Mr. Fidgets looked at her in ainazement. He had never seen his proper little | wite do anything quite so sporty be- |fore, Then, above the din of the sub- way, he heard her remark plaintively: “Oh, Frank, I've got a cinder in my eye. “Don't rub it,” he warned. “for that ! will imbed the cinder in the tissues, go that it will be very difficult to | remove.” Mrs. Fidgets sniffed. “I'd like to | know how I can help rubbing it when it hurts like sixty,” she remarked in- dignantly. “If you must rub something, rub | the other eye,” said Mr. Fidgets. “I read somewhere that railroad en- gineers always do that.” “What good does that do them?” demanded Mrs. Fidgets. Mr. Fidgets changed the subject. “Try blowing your nose hard,” he commanded. L. 't tried it already! PAIAAAIIAABIABIIBBBIBBABIBABBAAABAA | oA nein eaten © “ready Mr. Jarr Fares Sadly Forth “Here,” he sald, “I know just how to get it out. I will roll your upper Upon Another Trouble Hunt: eyelid over @ pencil and remove the offending obstacle with the end of my handkerchief.” EKK KCL KKK CCK CK KCK KKK KK KKK EEE EES | and passed out into the night. First) “I knew he'd pick a quarrel just to, pausing to see if Mrs. Jarr would re-/| ha’ excuse to get out,” moaned 66 Family McCardell Co, (The New York Evening World), | OTHER,” began the Baby 66 REN'T you going cut to-| be firm, walked to the t|lent, But she only laughed bitterly. Mrs. Jar. “But I won't stand it! | Bales ones asherionn na night?” asked Mrs. Jarr| where his coat and hat were hanging,! And med the door, When there is no place like home, | he walke pasate after supper, as Mr, Jarr anand sdutadaia pane weewed there Is always the man-trap at the kitchen, “Mother, Jimmy jonkey corner, Mr. Jarr walked into Gus's says we have a little man inside our [cafe, which was deserted of custom- head and he tells us what Ja right or ‘8 except the erudite poet, philoso- | wrong.” ; ‘aiidaat P d heavy-weight c! pion of; “I guess the little man Inside | Jimmy geis mixed sometimes when he the English language, Michael Angelo |i ioe tortell Jimmy what to do,” an- Dinkston, Mr. Dinkston never went | swered on the water wagon. “ “Ah, just the personage to whom fully, “Jimmy says that when he does |something which does not turn out my Vagrom thoughts had blithely fo Tene iris because he does not Other Women’s Husbands And a Growing Menace in Social Life. By Sophie Irene Loeb Copymght, 1915, by The Pres Mubiishing Go, (The Mrs. Baboon. MOTHER of several daugh- ters said the other day: “It used to be that we York Brening World), ‘Then there is that “lord of creation” Who goes on that time-wourn theory, which he has actually grown to A around, but it seems to me to-day Neve: “Man is by nature a polyga-|hurtied!” cried the leading poet of| listen to the little man. Jimmy just ehaperoned = young = girls Nothing of the sort! Harlem gayly. | ahead and does things without when young men were a wish and by an unwill | ing. to cherish and respect the | see,” said the good mother. whom he has sworn to honor, bat DOG'S 6) RURHAS | that the most important thing ts to the point of sacrifice, anybody in my liquor store!" | Guard them against the married men.| ‘The cases are very rare indeed where| Mr. Dinkston paid no heed to Gus. | “IL cannot understand why it is}a man who ts really “abused” and has|He wrung Mr. Jarr warmly by the, that other women's husbands seem.‘ i id ail! nand, drew a crumpled piece of paper | to have @ fascination for so many t of It, cannot find @ reason: | oon his pocket. ‘Phere is certainly bad situation | *° pocket, : where in our ty of young I have just composed an ode,” Mr, women to whom he can bring orly| Dinkston went on, and Gus looked suffering and sorrow. solemn at the word. “It is dedicated My dear girl, there are plenty of i , young men in the world, ‘There 1s no |‘ ™y patrician patron, Edward Jarf,| heed for encouraging the attentions |It is called ‘THE LAUGHTER OF | r in to women who get into entanglements and divorce cases because they do not seem to see the wrong and danger of associating with married ot other women's pushande bad |THE DEAD.’ It reads: men.” pusiness, to say the least, and very | «. | This woman re-echoed the sonti-| seldom brings any girl anything but| | Wal with & shoul when the mente woctations be nd the peril of being named us mee OFO 901, win in t of a way with ite consequent , !n the dusk, while the leprous moons with just a good fellowship idea | Smile wanly and white, and corpses view, which @r portions befor ted incite apow it. f & him. If his married life \s unbappy,| M® t? dance to the blare of bas- lies in the fa: t there ts so ‘he is the man he ought to be, he woons! freedom in | arras so that he mi With @ snake at my beart gnawing, oe between men and women. it ts u honestly rt anak you : there J depart mont noticeable that married men who! wife is best rid of him if he must fill| form a habit of going out without! hie life with others. on well in dank fone te & hovel, their wives refrain from telling giris| In other words, the married man Where Vampires belated, water hat they are married. On the other! the old” before drooping and sated, Wwaye with us the ry young And with ivatheome i sinderatood” variety of man that it In| ‘eeeall” wollen § usually has @ wife whom be mari 0 her a very early; and ray anhood to be courted a man j@ presented the usion to Mr. helped bim through his hardship has other ties. He certainly does Jerr With # Gourish, telling bim it he has grown tired of her und ything but @ selish spirit | would make bim famous forever, Mr, ven to @ younger and her to run the riske that | Jerr placed it im bie inside pocket, | and (hen —it was fate-bis dager Coun Lered Lhe two tickets to the gi ball of the Human Uniques! ar friendebips and Philosophy Wit, Wisdom WHAT YOU DO NOT SEE. By Voltaire, arancen deceitful? before it. The toven 0 moot be Rome osephers cera aaoat sf egetion eee, touch, Ras wet Reflections of — a Bachelor Girl Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World), 's character better in the dim light ura cory-cornor or the semi-darkness of a conservatory than amid all Sometimes a married woman never realizes what powers of observae” tion and expression her husband possesses until he begins to describe Rap)” im his own house; but it’s funny to see Copyright, 1915, by The Press Publishing Go, (The New York Drening Word), ” began her little boy, thought- | f Rowland When a man sees how much emotion those faults “hich his wife pefceives in him cause her he shudders to think what she should ever discover his real shortcomings. ‘0d happen if Alas! why ts it that a man invariably falls in love with a girl because she is “so different” from all the rest, and then rails at fate and heaves because he can’t make her “act !ike other women?” After love is dead a woman always wants to give it an elaborate buftal service, which makes a man feel like a ghost watching the surgeon per- form an autopsy on his own remains, . himself that he is lord and master “lord and master” sneakin, happens to stay out after midnight,: and to hear him mumbling excuses over the telephone when he ts afraid he will be half an hour late for dinner. So long as misery loves company marriage should be popular) because in matrimony you get both the company—AND the misery, No doubt a wife is “a slave’—but, then, so {s a husband, if you train Sense” Easy Solutions of Small Troubdles. Mrs. Fidgets looked at him dub. but she was in such disco fort that she at last consented to t! operation, to the intense interest of the other passengers, “I nearly got it that time,” sald Mr. Fidgets jubilantly. “Don't dodge so. How the dickens can I catch tt if you Jerk around like a jumping jack?” You nearly drove it into my skull,” complained his long-suffering spouse, I think I'd rather have the cinder than the treatment.” Straight to the nearest drug store she went and told her troubles to the clerk, “T can give you an eye stone,” said ” that young “man seympatheticatfty, “What's that? It'@ a smooth, peart- like substance made from the inst ofa shell. If it is placed under eith fi lid of the eye you won't feel it at aft. It will stay there until It has fou: the cinder and then tt will drop out. carrying the cinder with it. But this may take some little time,” Mrs. Fidgets intimated that she’ would lke something quicker. “If you will allow me,” said th: clerk, “I think I can remove it { stantly.” He took from the show a tiny camel's hair paint brush, and gently raisi Mrs. Fidgeta's eyelid, with one stroke of the brush he swept the cinder from its hiding place. Mrs. Fidgets looked /reproachfully at her husband. “HE didn't hurt me at all,” she said. JUNGLE TALE> FOR CHILDREN—By FARMER SMITH “Do you believe there is a little man inside of our heads who tells us wha “Oh!” exclaimed the Baby Baboon, “I know what our conscience js, for was going to ask you for something just now and my conacience told me to go ahi ir “What was it?” asked Mrs. Baboon, putting her arms around her son. @ piece of ple and one conscience hungry?” gu it is, mot and I think the little man inside Jimmy's head must be hungry, too,” said the Baby Baboon, as his mother took him into the pantry and gave him two big pleces of ple. The May Manton Fashions ERE garment modelled after the middle ages that really shows that period at its best. Itis wraceful, it takes be- coming lines, yet is cut with @ simplicity that marks the cos- tumes of that period, In the picture the over- dress is made of bead- ed nel id is worn over 4 plain allp, but this is @ garment that can ve used for @ variety of materials, It would be eedingly handsome made of velvet with would be very ful made of faille ilk, and it would also ne handsoine made of char- mouse satin: in fact, it is equally appropriate leavy materials and for the thinner and plain a slip of eh se malin is won fully Seautiful or V-shaped, so that a becomin, tne alwaye be found, and the ge cas. be wade ach & tune elould be worn & Mare ie MO Feadily in either body or row wir least about what he te Ht Som You dv wot see the potwork, Yor the medium size viease pany Journal Jarre to on ele. | cavities, the threads, | will Le needed for the a ——— - point moral Drunecs what we cali| the 4 tunte & yards of ma. tom oot gotee to quarrel lo the “me oe u od admire An Serial 27 inehee Ww New Your.” be dewiared Bo 1 wtey Thane’ aidnate Letters From the People er lets eee ae teur tise nove ob jee , ioe ensanne tee manning o St © Pattern No 8536-—Overdress in Moyen Age Style. - po pert Pur 4 in thee . J fa tee Toe pecseeoes. |throumh) those boys uf the Twenty. out, trusting Progr a oe Ste ool cee thorn by 6086 to on ta she + winen wunull 36 oF Feed tatoo then C’tvyen ctates | eines were ne ving-pongere, 10 be 4 1 return (het Yew il) On pl, ee ee er fn eae, far oughs we know,| 3 fe selevense to “ oure They stuck from Leginning 19 1 wilt NOT be in the company vf Juba oe oe Poe Bon themeaives the ine tee a lend and performed their w © Ow Hangie Why, the pour boob ie scan sent entitteciery masner: aid Up wiih elation it te 4

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