The evening world. Newspaper, February 18, 1915, Page 16

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BY JOSEPH PULITZER. m ew, Presiden: purer, Pienas for the United States 8 Park Row. Bark hom, Tork an Second-Clana Matter, All Countries tn the International Postal Union. 92.66) One Year. _. 80'One Month. ‘ NO, 19,539 _ SETTLING WHERE IT BELONGS. fp LAME for the subway accident of Jan. 6, which resulted in the Geath of one passenger and nearly suffocated hundreds of othera, shifts to the Public Service Commission, if we believe Hayward, counsel to the joint Legislative P Col. Commission and the Interborough made a The usefulness of the Investi- ite end as brother legislators at The incompetence of the Public Service established. Criminal responsi- fair way to settle where it belongs. The Dis- }) Wet Attorney cught to find use for Col. Hayward’s discoveries. December, while cars were burning up in the sub- ous whee |, From the People for Carteon. 4@ produced whun aun, earth and moo; be ‘The Kventng World: form a atraight fee with the earth 4 Of some real estate 1/in the middie, and since this constui. for the recent {lation js reached once a month and the /lasts, theoretically, but an instant, it Mrwey on fs any tee place oe La ih at the given moment, Anait moon happens we de not Bey Below the we bave a new moon eclipse of ta a little wo Satiefied to » moon” when the moon is nea: a and a DUTCHMAN, 41 @igned Later. Krening Word duly @ the or aoe 7 ‘aod signed lator? For England and the Continent and ‘the | Pressure in the service pipes not be- the sun. Com ‘pend tn thie ine straight ling with the other| But Miss Emma Jarr wanted the Prone Publishing Compatiy, New. 69 to NO 1AM THe cari HALE Ganeene Fon & - RostAL DANCING CLUB. Worn! Bur THe: HARD TES | WHY Don ‘T Ton out ee wou IR BANC a AT EVERY DANCE «HLL INVITATION. We HET EVERY SaToRpany The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell \:ith “For a Good Giri” on it and to ise the red one superscribed “For Mr. Jarr. The Dower of Beauty Mr. Jarr Looks Forward to a Dull Day; But, as Usual, His Forecast Goes Wrong @HDHHHHHHHHHHEGQHHIHBDOHDSSDDHDODHHD|GHHHHGHDOHHHHHOHOOOO & Good Boy,” that little Miss Jarr consented to take the latter. “Think it's going to rain?’ asked No, I don't think 60,” sald Mr. “It'e going to be a dull af- however.” Mr. Rangie was a poor prophet; it was going to be anything but a dull afternoon. \Master Isadore Slavinsky would prevent it from being @ dull afternoon. Master Isadore Glavinsky Was creeping down @ aide street at the Ooyoright, 1018, by The rem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), a Making the Throat Beautiful. F all the letters that 1 receive from women who would be beautiful, the greatest number ask how they may remedy untimely lines ead sagging muscies of the throat. ‘They went into the toy store where nstrator in the window was the red and blue toy bal- to glowing red and shining blue eemi- transparent fair round spheres before the delighted eyes and the white fiat- tened noser of half the juvenile popu- lation af the aeighborbood, who have money ‘or neither movies nor bal- Joons. “These are the genuine old-fash- toned gas balloons,” sald the demon- trator, when Mr. Jarr edged into the atore, “They must not be confused with the ordinary kind that are sim- ply blown up with alr and are given to deluded children, tied to the end of stiches, These alloons wil) rise in the air as high a» you choose to let them rise by the cord attached, The ordi- pary balloons will not rise at all. It As the atick that holds them up. Care must be taken, however, that the hold on the cord is not loosened or these balloons will fly away. We iuflate them under pressure, No, it cannot be done on an ordinary jet, the 2.—Lent and Its Meaning. LL Easter. ing strong enough to distend the en- velope. Will the little lad have a red one, with ‘Yor a Good Boy’ on It, or a dive one?” ‘this makes the full complement an analogy between Lent forty-day fast of Christ, days spent by Moses and | the wilderness and the forty red one with “For a Good Boy" on it, Offering her one of the same hue with “For a Good Girl" on it oMy eaused her to shtick, It was only whoo her brother with @ boyish cun- Bing affected to desire a bive one|fisasrats anstinence in the use Naneveh. MAKING THE "HROAT BRAUTIFUL {ringent o8 as long a8 into the skin pure cow's cream, pure olive oll, of some good known value. Do not try new things on the throat, for it is easy the ekin of the neck and very hard to build it up. The rubbing should in e cirovlar direction, with the tips of the fingers, beginning at the chin Bt 4 working down very gently. ' Little Talks About Lent. \ ENT, so church histories and encyclopaedias tell us, de- rives ite name from the| 8nd to Saxon word “Lengtentide.” This word applied to the customary spring fast which was kept by Chris- tlans during the forty days preceding Not wntil 640 A. D. was the period of Lent definitely fixed for all Catholic Christendom from Ash Wed- | Be nesday to Holy Saturday, inclusive. As Sundays are not days of fasting, | « forty days aud therefore establishes and the the forty by Blas in| grace in the preaching of Jonah to|that on. that day the the Episcopal Church Lent at way. . Jarr and Mr. Rangle had oeePnay it of ie Breoodin — ‘thou, wol jull_ afternoon. ° house), and collars should always have a white lining, aa the dys of colores goods ruins the skin of the throat. At twenty-five yeare of age, and @ometimes at twenty-two, the neck begins to show creases and sagging muscles that should not ia woman of sixty year if the right care to her t THE AMERICAN IDEA—By Daniel Webster. > 3 quired by the American Revolution’ Is Ukely to be retained, for it consists mainly in the acquisition of more en- Mghtened ideas, and although king- doms and provinces may be wrested from the hands that hold them tn the jeame manner that they were obtained, although ordinary and v power may in human affairs be lost as it bas been won, yet it is the glorious Prerogative of the empire of know! edge thet what it gaing it never loses. On the contrary it increases by the multiple of its own powe: ite onde become means, all ite attal a ments help to mew conq 4 whole abundant barvest “le. i ii Hil Be before retiring, gently okin i & & ruil Ess ascertained an: can the amount Zz Lge 4 And now let us indulge wi le of our coun- try has produced and is like! _ duce on buman freedom tf hi ma and ce be gevotad ss con more extended public dever tions, the churches being kept con- atantly Opes Sor the aS purpose, ‘The jun tween Wednesday and Lent because gayoty that more tim religious Teflection, to all its importance the part as- midst | signed to us in the great drama t eney are! human affairs. bed from the i mother of us all.” The Fifth Sunday is “Passion Sunday.” from the fact eservi recital bind — a Sering example and ta! vt ing of Christ's « nothing may Weaken its power auiong ; Sixth Sunday fo “Malm Sya.' us who established our y oy Sieains | ar poversipeat.. Tha greet rust Bowe Y hese | in town; he also kept weveral ser | rig, ag |ATEVER benefit was ag: advisedly. Pacey Karli a Bachelor G From the day on which she tips the scales at onehundredand orgy, ' chief excitement of a woman's life consists in spotting women whe fatter than ehe is. ‘There are times when one cup of coffee and a porterhouse steak: more to transform @ husband from a fiend into a seraph than the River Jordan. A man’s notion of an ideal lifemate seems to be the sort of girl fancies that a thesaurus is a prehistoric animal, Schopenhauer a brané beer, and the dictionary Just something to stand on when you want to Best™ ce aleelaiag J ie ‘There is no, use trying to interest « girl in the really serious Oe as life until she has found out whether or not she is going to get a hi Copyright, 1915, by The vem Publishing Uo, (The Now York sivemng World), ICAN men an@ we-jbas struck.” It looks only men of to-day seem to| {he to-morrow that al know a lot about whist| man and parties, dinner parties, | fice, tea parties, lunch par- ties, tango parties, They don't eed to know much about their homes.” ‘These are the words of Irving Ba- cheller, the author of homey books. He further points out the fact that of all the citizens who left “footprints on the sands of time” you can't @nd one who wasn't & “home-made, 66 the home for hours at a time. We can't stop that. In a Hoge’ which spells does not the Americas «<< Dregreas kind, freedom P “hour that but strength in union, bsg = : My Wife’s Husband —==By Dale Drummond = Coprright, 1918, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Zvewing Werld), CHAPTER VII. me ws DID not like Lucius,Hem- “ha: been the usual ming. He was too suave twith her; and wh: too oily, to please me. He/| fused to run in ‘debt, ry ce was evidently very wealthy, Se with me in the old di his home being the finest | 9 would me: home forever before antiquat vants and two motor cars, beside/ that spavined old rye et A other appurtenances of people of once dependent means. no matter I made my first professionai call 0D | how much I u Mrs, Hemming, a call at which Dr.| _ I know now t! Tobish sneered, saying be supposed they thought I was cut something after the same Harps aah xe P scat big fraud they in ing Pig ety, who took thelr money and inched’ ruins ar waa I, ani 0. ‘bias fhe’ matter with Mrs, Hem- ming, except Lucius Hemming! ‘Although my practice had increased a very little, I had not sollected aay at aa would not umier, etand my post! Often at firat—oftener : hace "ould Zeert chet ate Rag" mone/ to speak of, + er father, instead Gp°™ “ hat the tradesmen | her stepfather, so t! . A Wonder | “tunored their bila as| ‘hat ale could nai wis etene feet ote Ph aoa Geo told “her mother that, ong jow stat money for her leasantly. viel rather think they, doctor should have at live on before bi tise,” Jane return Jane had seem! pride she ond te ay, Ls jostor’s wife; she no lo the al ma were not brightly polished, aaid: and she made fun of the o! ice, al- though I did my best to make tl neat and attractive mm the musty es a would say a ast enough to being @| which Jane had car cared if} on the desk), in ets car. aCe was one cause of the disturb- sere We Maye gic guaretod ‘ayousht I should at Jane that I spoke of in ter, the Vise . have all to and abe might have acco: was . (To Be Continyed.) descends to new hands, Let us apply NOTHING BUT OUR CO vurselves to that which is presented | ans by the blessing of God 40 us as our appropriate object, We | cou! itself becom: can win no lau i ar for inde- | »plend worthier hands’! sio: - : monum and terror, ve gathered them peace and of liberty uj

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