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Ve Daily She. EFiy wird. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Published Daily Except Burday by the Press Fublioning Company, Nes, 53 to 43 Park Row, New Yo Fifty Dates ‘You Should Remembe s Peat eo 88s See MRS Jack Sa ue By Albert Payson Terhune He To CRawe ‘ Reteriees Ooparight, 1915. by The U'ree Publishing Oo, (1 ¢ New York Evening Wort), = “To LOSE WeiquTr NO. 31.—JAN. 30, 1649.—8nglish Monarchy Overthrow” FIND THE LAW-BREAKERS FIRST. New market manipulation nor shortage of wheat has to; meet, to the triumph of one and the ruin of the other—and tb HERE were two Englishmen of about the same age, who TT life at opposite ends of the Highway, and who were destined cidentally to the changing of the world’s history. ‘ 1 One was the King and the son of a King. The other was « farmer 86": the son of a village magistrate. One represented the Classes; the other’ the Masses. One was the handeomest and most accomplished man of his; { day; the other among tbe ugliest and most uncouth, One was Charles: ey | King of England. The other was Oliver Cromwell. . ne | Charles was the figurehead of the Old Order; Cromwell not. only - | etood for the New, but he was-also the leading spirit in founding @:1e,« public more than a century before republics came into fashion—in t@.. firet historic smashing of the silly idol known as the “Divine Right @,”) be invoked to explain price-boosting activities of the sort at- tributed to the Ward Baking Company in this city. A Ward driver testified that, acting on his employers’ orders. ho “persuated” fifty-one out of fifty-two of the company’s retail cus- tomers that they must sell Ward bread for six cents a loaf. On hear- ing the evidence, Deputy Attorney General Becker dclared If Ward drivers went out to get an agresment with the re- taflere to raise prices on instruction of managers, {f that isn't e Conspiracy I don't know what the word menms. The District Attorney's office hes eat to work on this case. The Grand Jury will have ite duty to perform ‘later. _ We congratulate the State Inquiry Into the Rise in Food Prices ia baving promptly got down to brass tacks. The very first step in attempts to put up the price of food hereabouts is to get after the skulking price boosters who try to cover illegal schemes of plain extortion with complaints about over-export and speculation. Tf all such plotters are promptly exposed and prosecuted there will be a notable sluggishners in so-called “war prices” on food Mined) ech gp abat ha aa q ; One of the foremost men in this Parliamentary pearty—a man. products for many days to come. : f to rise higher and higher until he ruled all England—was Oliver : = He had long since become disgusted by Charles's misrule and had Kings”—in the first complete triumph of an English-speaking face, OTPE |tyranny. Altogether, Jen. 30, 1649—when Monarchy and the King’s both were cut off—is a date worth remembering. © Charles I. was convinced that kings wore Cottages of ed by God to rule, and that the pcopla were “Divine Righ by God to obey. It was not a new ides. Indeed, % ° was almost as old as the world itself. For of years monarchs had done pretty much as they pleased and the people! had meekly submitted. ¢ wv But by the time Charles came to the throne the English «ere to think for themselves. hs ‘The people were represented by Parliament. And whenever Pari! ” refused to obey the King with slavish meekness the King had a way dismissing Parliament and then of carrying out his own wishes ‘wit qonsulting the people those wishes affected. i rt 4 Parliament—and the people at large—rebelled at such treatment, ‘ané! civil war rent Engiand; the King and hie “divine right” followers ageiset: z Join a band of other malcontents who were about to emigrate to A! halt Neutrality: has protested and) perepired, but unless we are ped PE GIG ued the idea of Kon Beta and had Ptr the ship's ” rT ry ing. mwell had remained—to jp overthrow Charles, ay " SOS 1h. vil srotty hu hharced . & ‘The war waged hotly for a time; ‘but at last the royal j were scattered, and Charles fled to Scotland for refuge. The Scots thri! 8di6.” him to Parliament, and he was brought back to England a ner. OLD FRIENDS AT ODDS! i caught the King, ‘Perilement ald pet kpew. fost wnet: te’ Go with ’ they should set him free hia followers would rally around him again: HE Public Futility Commision of the First District now fumes, eu ARs WiLL the war would recommence. And should they try to keep hfm in | or pretends to fume, because the Interborough told it nothing WA: SLEEP Staowa un,{ | | Ae: Was every cheese Sowers corte tebe erehan, Thee about the real cause of the subway short circuit accident of WOMEN'S Vue Get THN acerca | Ser Eine ee Pe aavorente ot OF Fact eieae aam although the Interborough’s counsel admits he has since whis- MAGAZING j of Liberty. On Jan, 30, 16 jen was beheaded. Not amtit. the facts to the District Attorney. To which the Interborough sod actoaly bominn mala, tie republie—-Proteotomnie”.ag It wae laf ‘ y , lly begin. The world stood aghast over the execution ‘of\e. § unnaturally retorts that the Commission's own must be ay Mi ki assass! 5 ‘ 4 vd Sale died: tha font doy. engineers WS blain people dared to lake the aw into the own anc len sondenan kn | Which is the Public Service Commission going to edmit—that it 6) heard ef. PURI AR eam h sa to get the facts or that it deliberately suppressed them? . Pected Sree Lael petit damental fatty ane tovenne mek cet bee After all, what's the difference? ither way, 00 fer as its duty shadows by comparison to the will of the people. ppm fia peaBng public is concerndd, the Commission merely shows itself to have Frosdoess Cees ote an renaion aetinet 8 Mag's'obprestion, BOE Cm fn oné more instance, outrageously, criminally negligent. Spite- , at its old crony, the Interborough, only invites profounder ie contempt. How much longer must this body of alleged public fants encumber the State? So Wags the World By Clarence L, Cullen : Coperight, 1915, ty The Pres Pubttshing Oo, (The New Yert Rvening World), Hl H, yea, “it's the women who suf: ; girls of our own epooh begin te. Seeretary of State Hugo signed the Suffrage resolution with Kal ‘heard sald sore [00 ens “a tl tng fm ; ve read and heard eaid some * &.purple pea. If Suffrage wine next fall we foresee some new - seventeen thousand times since it By, tana anaeian’ ae coe eae echemes in State politics. wan. The idea is, of course, that the | dickens, re .. Ss SL PS : women “must endure their heartache beracng The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Fi ial Angel alone.” Still, st te velleved possible) nlm? Mey we're going to THE STRANGLE HOLD. Mr. Jarr Is Enrolled as Financia ge 5 Beach as -escertain I starvation clutch fe on. At no time since the that the men in the trenches also suf |conducted visual demo: fer from heartache in addition to their |of the “famous societ | of the war has there been anything eo near a death grip. And To an Impromptu Relief Expedition |Miirtiom troven toot end v0 on, ond |fet__tbomaniven, “an a th rail POPORSORODOOSOOSS DESSENOTESTSRESSTOESEENSEETEOREOED |05 to the “wlone” part of It, propin- |Gnen teen nar toe ee quity is no unguent whatever for chil- | simulation of lahfter) are as the big crisis looms net on land but on esa. to run with mine and he cut the string |commenced to swarm up the poles, i blains and euch iike. their megazine pictures make « Te the waiting world an appealing feature of the (Capyright, 1016, by ‘The I've Publishing Vo, (The New York Evening World), close to my hand.” when a very hairy person in overalls by te ha. d ing contest has been Beveral of those nondescript men|came running out of the adjacent ve R. JARR Mr. Rangle, ac) Maeter » “Deca made ¢ i absence of decisive results from the sleaghter on M cameadion by Master Willie ors pees who, It would seem, are permanently , Millions dein, wounded and captured, two-hundred-mile battle- Jerr and litte Emma Jarr sf temporarily unemployed and who z r with their captive toy balloons, ow yow: maintain bachelor apartments in coal strolled down the aven' ‘The obil-/ “Waw! Waw! Waw! Blagh blagh!"|and lumber yards, came gathoring sbouting in Funning| wailed his little sister. around, at the Inge that) “HH, juck up behind us,” Master| ‘I'l give a quarter to any of you men who will get the balloon,” said him ‘cos he’s got on his Indian moc- | Mr. Jarr. or There's a Zinc Cross awaiting the! 19 ine whol lumber yard and called hoareely. “Do! oo) roves princess we hear of who|tnic Gresent ghersigt] ‘he youse guyse want to be cooked? Com- |i an “angel of mercy” to the|plcturee of professional mit a moidah and git electrocuted troops, then there is no occasion what genteel with all the comfoits of Sing ‘wonder over the increage in ohne Sing. Them's live wires!” Another drain on the respiratory — es tem is to jaw all through dinner| Yes. ie MROW 8 see See, 4 Mollie of the Movies bas, ‘bat i i ut 6-cent bread after having |having tried the game sloughed off $1.86 for drinks on the|NOT becom way home. playing it because he seid hé coy! see an: ‘J —- in it. Yes, again, casing, and he atuck a knife in| “I'll make it fifty cents,” said Mr. By Alma Woodward ‘We've amilea for years at the faded |are tutimately acquainted with's Emma's b'loon and when she hollered | Rangle. Copsright, 1915, ¥%, Pe, Pree Pul ighiog Oe, pheteersane in the a hid Lleael al- cay c ertenen wae arate, . (The New York Evening World), um our wimmen rel ven at pol tion his, tnd RD6.T enrmas ond noon him I atartes| Immediately, the. nondescrint_ men a in their balloony skirts, dinky hats daughters after having aunged* HERE are lilies peeping just|with streamers, &c., of the late aixties it luridly, DID NOT become above the window ledge. And/and early seventies, Yet when the bug, but denounced it more than By Marie Montaigne if 1 sit up in bed—which they The May Manton Fashions won't let me do—I can eee a row of scarlet poppies staining the green ee . My room ts white and spotiess HIB blot i, Coparight, 1918, bg The Eres Publishing (0, (The New York Evening Workd), om and full of lodoform, <A hospital— Wy ory pretty Electricity as Beauty's Aid. 2%) alittle voet hay fornia! you want @ real live, glowing face? Why, then, just attach eome i Sate thought thet if you aliows effective use-0f one of the many electrical appitances for massage to your electric| have to be sick it'd be lovely to have contrasting material. fixtures and proceed to dab chained lightning all over your cheeks| beautiful things to look out on—but It is simple too; it ien’t, I'd rather be in one of those equally pretty grim, shoddy looking, stone piles d wear with the The Dower of Beauty i the prion o€ Breads Ua toit'adl wee Savenate the tues. [back 1m my home town, where may skirt,-with the talloted” well with the world except war and | Besides the improve walls slap your room window in the sult, or when amée: face and the motorman’s gong splin- with’ skirt to mace) # hard times and sickness and bad luck wrought by electricit: teen th bane at the tl pails Bea sda ned W . 0 one-pieee Hite From Sharp Wits. ; ‘ | serves: aio’ to. obittcrate wrinkion |, Dacause when everything's. gloomy own. In the plot free taste at to look for | the army of the Indeed, many women take regular | getting from under the shelter you're . the material ie -emm,, have more] be that way.—Cotumbia | electric massage from specialists in|{n, It doesn't call to you #0 sharply. broldered. cotton eneg wr ae | are q te bad of erties, Pehle Me view But hore Srerve hepa is Cigar 00 3 combined: with plagtiy” “f “ }o wiping o1 @ mar! of age or| gold an us Ape: . ately imagined that a freight train 3 q rry and smoothing over the face|a dislocated shoulder, roken collar- and that combination had run over the obildren. ‘ t h youthful bloom, bone and a fractured tem} { of a thin arte “They can't be hurt,” comforted A fact known to all students of the | You chained to the bed. with 9 “beary Sy Mr, Rangle, “if they can holler like d, oc art of beautifying is that fresh blood | ™ ’ mas . that!” sa | bullds up tissue, and it is, therefore, " feature: of ‘the ,, Mr, Jarr had by this time reached ? the sodenres i sapere to bring models, Crep the corner near the tracks. All he " fresh to pale and hollow cheeks, * Chine with Bén \ both to impart color and to plump hi parents could never say or with eldk, Goths cnn rane) email boy reasies | | TEE Md | them out. Anything, therefore, from 5 Feoult he grew up to be maxes, a fashionall for dear life in one direction and his jer in, the by wee) pan Uitte girt and Master Jarr screaming ; GOATS Bale Wilh | erease-soreres ¥ 3 ; : nd tive and stamping, but eafe and unharm- Ne _ will bring blood to the surface is good| But now he was reformed. hat 4 bes on. tee DRTORARL. 80.09, Oia J for the face, mine ‘being that of the executor of there were none in aight, x . . Another way in which tissue te estate. He was a hand- “My b'loon!” cried litte Mise Jarr. made firmer and tasoleg toned up is One of those Johns with “Look MIND! wi to rub tee over the face and neck | viole 3 Me elutes ant after the morning bath. This, too, | midnight eyes and a smile like dawn EcTRIC has a wonderful effect in preventing | 4nd a blush of late afternoon in his cheeks. and removing wrinkles. A faithful | "Pe" picture was adherence to the ice rub in the morning and a akin food gently rubbed and/ ,, Rochester.” In reel two, to patted into the face and neck at night work wonders for the complexion, illustrate the “safety first” slogan, 1, Rosamond, es iappows, ‘e be i ith. | t in a bu when fire : Jungle Tales for Children. qe « By Farmer Smith,| trapped, in bullding when | fre woe ot THE EVENING WORLD MAT MANTON cape. Claude, happening to be pass- ‘ery well,” answered Jimmy, as he| {ing on his way to @ tango tea, ap- pidge pay Bg veoigt 4 .| went upstairs to his room. rs on the soe three floors be- fer cack pattern ordered, “Did something explode?"| " pretty soon Mister Monkey heerd|low. The firemen haven't arrived. I stamps asked Mister Monks “Pop!” sad ha ran to the foot of the| am witine. Ag bi poenarte DEPORT Aare yout stevens “ ” tal $ says I'm to ase conte for letter ‘Why, no,” answered his good wife. | s *iiatay So kev, diane 1 ta you af at ate rehearsed it wen in bas 1 duh patch of shrivelled, dark | "wont anawered Mister Monkey, °1| NOt to call me Pop’ or I wo Well, the Ingenue, who te just|to jump and I had left my moorings fm ber hand, It was all that thought he said ‘Pop,’ and that ts not)” “Yes,” laughed Jimmy, “but\tint/dippy about this guy, eaw the in-|already and was on my way down, | terly remained of what had once been &| my nam was the popgun I got for Christasas.| tense way he folded me to his ‘reast | she extracted the cork & bottle great big, beautiful, blue toy ges| “Never mind,” epoke up Jimmy. “1|Do you want me to bring it down for| and fell to it that he was gettting too | of surcharged Fis the words "Pot a Grea| was xvlng to tell you where the eve- flossy. Se, knowing bie etermed bed : aid ‘ " paper ia, but I won't now.” Teen Roawer Mister and you suppose that | hore, oO canal ee a alone ee SS ETS , @ Jimmy Monkey one| A,|dosen strung between poles by the bh © iA oe railroad track. 70° and| ‘Where's yours?” asked Mr. Jarr. "p*G| The littio girl danced up and down in rage and grief and indicated a ‘at was Jimmy speaking to you.”