The evening world. Newspaper, March 24, 1915, Page 16

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esday. March 24. | Fifty Dates You Should Remember By Albert Payson Terhune ervate 1915 ty Tee Pree ming Ce The New Tort Granting Wert) No. 45- APRIL 24, 1704; America’s Piret Newepaper. T was not much of a pewepaper It wae teeued only once a weeth METABLIENED BY JOSEFN PULTE EN Pubtiahes Deiiy Bacept Ponder vy me Prowse Pe.’ ie Fare ompeny, New OF \e Te LATEST Man > EVERY wnt RE \ One Went... It consisted of @hat #as (hen knows VOLUME 45... leat t by twelve tneber -— The quality of paper TOY. simorl be le al eee la il Meet of ite contents were stolen bodily (rom I APPRARS there is one way to rouse the Chairman of (n¢ Public Bice @ Dewnpaper the firet ee * ger A e wee m c pu whe in Horton The firet number © ought out om Apr’ ae , | Service Commission of the Miret District to action dated "Prot Bonde, Avi) 11, ta Weadee, AprM 44" Om If complaints from the public regarding abuses he wee pa 4 to rectify had ever struck s tenth es much fire out of Mr. Met it ®as led “The Horton Newsletter” The front page bore the am ' " Vrinted by Bo Green and Sold oy Nicholas Hoone” The, se have complaints of hu conduct in office, be would not now he editor and proprietor was Joun Cam stuvaster of Boston ’ " . As far back as 1690 one Miehard IY sd (fled to launch @ hewepaper | pry J at the forces which public opimon has set in motion to get 6 Bea RANE ne NOP one meses T3shse dim | a glut A Chairman of the Public Service Commission sheiong hie fet in Hut tt died the Executive Chamber of the State Capitol, belittling the high fune-| | : al rite authorities oypprensed the paper on the “reflections of @ very bight noture” whatever that may have mean'. And for fourtern years Amertca went newepaperiess, Then Postmast Campbell sought and se leave to bring out “The Boston News-Latters having @atisfied the authorities that no “reflection of a very high nature™ phould a ite clght-by-twelve contents, | The American public showed no wild enthustasin over the paper, People had always gleaned news by word of mouth or by private letter. When anys thing of vast Importance happened tn one etty the Inhabitants of othep cities did learn of \( for # long time, and then usually ina garbled form, rene wo slow, Bach town was on isolated community, Mue& travel from New York to Hoston than to go now eago, Yet, little by little, folk grew interested In the Idea. Enough ao, at leash | to keep the paper from bankruptcy, It {# « miracle that the Boston Newse Latter murvived, For It was drearily stupid, Newegathering was an une known art. The most important local event was shelved for some trivial happening in Kurope, When, tn 1719, Campbell doubled tho size of his fo od he printed the weird announcement that this was done in order to jthe new rand more acceptable, whereby that which seem'd old in 4 | former half-eheeta becomes new now by the . This time twelvemontt | we were thirteen months behind Great Britain with the foretgn news, an@ jnow less than five months, So that we have retrieved about eight monthe | mince January lant. | “January next, life permitted, our readere will be accommodated with all the news of Hurope that are needful to be known in these pa But Campbell did not carry out thin golden dream of an up-to-date news ‘ naw, Rervice, He lost his Job as postmaster, And the porte manter who succeeded him started @ paper on his owe, account—"The Boston Gazette.” Campbell retired hia editorship, and his printer, B. Green, took charge of the “News-Letter.” (The Gazette's first printer, by | the way, was James lranklin, elder brother of Benjamin Franklin.) Thus did American journalism gain ite very slow etart, Tho Bostog paper went out of business In 1776, whon the British evacuated the city. It¢ owner was loyal to King George, and when the patriots aeized Boston the per was shut down. Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy. THE IDEAL OF WOMANHOOD. | mother, though when he tells us th By Mary Wollstonecraft. pabesl are forme’ for © account for and excuse the| pret tyranny of men many In-| true Mahometa: tens of the Commission and trying to bully his way out of the toile is which neglect of duty has landed lim, ie not an edifying epectacie “1 care no more for the place than « child for « broken toy,” Mr. MeCuall is reported to have shouted. So it seems. But the people of thie State are not going to see 988,000 jobs put into the hands of men who look upon them as toys to be played with and thrown away. They have to thenk Mr. McCe for @ lemon and » warning The former has been expensive, but the latter will be heeded. | —— Chief Inspector of Police Schmittberger has been lecturing | the force on how to bandie riots. ‘Who's going to riet? Recipes for Runsing Down Mur- Gevere 10 the chapter thet needs Milling. ———————— po LET THE CITY SAY THE WORD. | W": one word to the Public Service Corporetion of New } | | | Jerecy the Oity of New York, through moral suesion, can make certain « three-cent fare on the Fort Lee Ferry. This is the opinion of Assemblyman Arthur M. Agnew, epecial counsel appointed by the Board of Freeholders of Festern Bergen County to represent them in the fight for lower ferry rates. The Public Sevice Corporation which controls the ferry hes already asked for a conference. “1 am going to insist on @ settlement of the question during | the present week,” declares Assemblyman Agnew. ‘AS @ result of the meeting of the Fighting Mayors of East- ere Bergen County at Palisades Park last week, and of the vigorous and highly commendable campaign which {9 being waged by The Evening World, I believe a thi ent rate can | \ be arranged. The resolutions passed by the New York Board | iq | genious arguments have sepriy ny oh of Aldermen show which way the arrow is pointin; | been brought forward to tractive Bryce and docile, i , prove that the two sexes in | bliin dience to fy the senses ‘The Aldermen unanimously voted to ask New York's Oorporation the aciuirement of virtue ought to! of ma: no longer eos? Counsel to explain whether the city means to let a few paltry pickings aim at attaining @ very different | fs’ the wings of contemplation. ¢ H ly do they Ineult r from ferry profits array it againet the solid benefits to business end te oa Oe ee ee pay prtpeirtt avi ‘in only 1%, Tender “oureel property that will result from lower ferry fares. The New Jersey ; Mr. Jarr Restores a Friend’s Faith cient atrength of mind to aoquire tho womanly wottnean Sites corporation is waiting to see what New York will do. Th J F 1 what really deserves the name of vir- | frequently recommended that gove | It is up to the city to side, with ite citizens. Now is the time e alrrt aml y At a Total Overhead Charge of $2.35 ae these women are not » swarm of| @2,'9,,8¢ in a very SAP hIIDeomont \ manner when they try to secure the ! te say the word. good conduct of women by attempt. } y ing to keepethem always in a state of childhood, Children, triflers, why should they be kept in ignorance under the specious name of innocence?) Men complain, and with came back and paid you, your belief in the general goodness of human na- ture would be restored, won't it?” for what that loafer Dinkston calls walue received!” By Roy L. McCardell et —-—__ No wonder. ridle, the Turk needs something to massacre. oi Turks Apathetic Toward the War.—Headlin | The foe te big and well armed. To be ter- 7} * aald Qui I see President Wilson hi ven an ultima tum to Bngland and all whether you are in the car emt that “nearly every one enjoys or efoot in the road. In seeking to be fair to the motorists, Secretary of State Hugo pointe the sensation of speeding along American flag, but a» my brother Meyer says, what plays the clarinet id wants to gu back to Germany to fight for the Vaterland, only he knows Gtevight level road ot a forty-mile clip.” he's too old and they won't Jet him Copyright, 1915, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Kraning World), fine feller and then find out he !# @ regular ekinn: ‘Well, maybe ao, agreed Mr. Jarr, eo far to say that, but what I do way te If you belief everybody in no good and you find they aln't no good, then you see you was right and you ain't lost anything by them, and you “Sure it would,” said Gus, “Ain't that just what I've been gaying to you? But Latn't going to throw away my good feelings for nothing till they you do to prove your faith in me if I Were to ask you to lend me a dollar, and that will mako !t two thirty-five, ti! Saturday night?” “I knew you were going to ask me Pepaaamanaaerearonaanatst3eri How to Make a Hit! Bu Alma Wecdeere reason, of the follies and caprices of Jour sex when they do not keenly sat~ irize our heartstrung passions and “Behold,” { should [ grant, should be inng. cont, but when the epithet is applied to men or women it is but another term for weakness. In @ seragiio I grant that all aft of coquetry are necessary. Bi band's key in the lock, advance to meet him with this: “This is & fine time to be coming home, isn't it? Other men can get home at"— and taugh' mothers that a little knowledge of human weakness, justly termed com- mon softness by the example f temper, “ do come back and pay me. And, by| have women so little ambition as them foreign nations that fight] “but It is a bad way to belle even thU WAN; WMAE JOU eee mO-tEORL inal Comvright. 16, by the ie Pree ra Nantog Co, satisfied with such a condition AND SLOW MAJORITY mit de Kalser. I don't know] if only at first, that all men are sin- Geeait lak: Actin suicty sive. svghing Wor ‘an they supinely dream life away THE SAFE . what he mea about it, but 1! ister.” on ae i a ee y- ie mati With ea Unexpected Guest tive fury when there are no bar-| the lap of pleasure or the languor of Never min im Mr. J nr 7 ¢ v. HE feel about auto opeeding alters according to! Mp, Wo something about hooting) on, go!" suid Gua, “I don't say | «wnat would you say aed what would IRST—When you hear your hus- |" Woinen ate told froin thelr infanoy] Claim to puraue reasonable Pleasures wey you 8 8 wubinarines at our shipy under th®| werdody in ainstera, 1 wouldn't Ko you say and what wou : e D of their) and render themselves companions practising the virtues which digni! mankind? Surely she has not an ime outward Mortal soul who can loiter life aw: catch wight of the guest, Mr. obedience and @ acrupulous attention erely employ it to adorn to a pourile kind of propriety, will ob- Dereon that Smith, 1 didn’t see you pose you two boys have been stop- ping at places, Naughty, naughty! (Business of forced smile.) tuin for them the protection of men, and should they be beautiful every- thing else is needless for at least twenty years of their lives. guid hours and aoften the cares of @ fellow-creature who is willing to be enlivened by her smiles and tricks when the serious business of Ife i@ something like that when you was saying how grand {it waa to trust everybody,” remarked Gus gloomily in the army, and anyway he ain't got money to with a ship across, and if he did he'd only play hia yellow aln't got no disappointments.” “So you believe in no one, and you Uf all the eworn haters of motoristea were to 4m por- ftom of Geir time inside a car, instead of always seeing or a conti ribes our first frall’ oura, 6 ft from without. there {es no knowing what might ;trust no one?" asked Mr, Jarr, ag ho fished a dollar from the till.) Second—Follow your husband into] Thus Milton descr emailing clarinet, and maybe the rules and) i nave to trust some of them, but| "but just the same if 1 wae one of | the Privacy of his own room and get reed Appin is rr ee do not Me to do It," nald Gus. those peppermintas-pestermistarcyou /t%™!8 Of your chest: "What do you ; beopee. ing 0 =| The May Manton Md everybody once tasted the exhilaration of roller skating on a emeoth ellowelk there is no telling what the streets of New York Fashions ” . mean by bringing home a man with. tetas te (ts Gismeny arkly. havens. I wasn't speaking of trust in the|called me I wouldn't be a big boob to|our letting me know? ‘Thie in the my brother Meyer ie a big bluffer, but | sense of credit,” said Mr, Jarr, “but|give you a dollar in cash when you | Waied Gah tor the roast beef, and it's ors’ Leger hd yen “ . a it some tl minced! man like Jack Smith, too usually attractive ewbdenty be like, or to whet point the hospitals would fill up| won't want anybody, not even you, |< "ome Of the People who owe you|already owe me a dollar thirty-five ued fo butlera in. hy motiver's B thie pring, | See | ot the situation in hand. te know it.” house for years und filet mignon for law and the police got the Tee ek ug havent: gon “a breakfast! Do you want to humiliate sentially boyllike, they Mereifully, skating io undignified and motoring expensive. We Madiy (asa for sayiblen of aar= |me? Quarter past seven and all the are so treated e 7 ee, loned they eam oti) count on a substantial majority of slow-moving citizens whose | poay?” asked Mr. Jarr. "You aure Reflections of | Went sunt ait aoen bad sateen overseverity and sive right to eafety and comfort will keep down exuberances of «port or| are ® pessimist!” juntil "I call: you—and it'll be some nomething of the plac eat" | Third—Dash into the kitchen and |wlve these orders; “Della, get out a} |couple of those guest towels that | Lottie gave me for Christmas—the ones with the Delft blue and white “It that word means that you can't| fool this Dutchman with that bunky why, all right,” maid Gu: {t ain't my fault, I wi turesque effect thatie . For this majority the lawe are made. no prevalent in this pottecs ere, luckily, recruited. ee From this majority a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland in one wit! Jacket, trousera a: blouse. In the picture ut greenhora when I come to thie coun- ’ and wee that the French violet the jacket and tl Froets biting the peaches and plume {n Louisiana and try, but when you run a liquor store in the holder and pick up the Sroseere are sae Misetes! 1] ' ty y you don't belief bathroom @ bit, because Master Willle | ergo ani ie blo} pol Poors deer opring! She never: had mush a see SB looLie a Copyelant, 1918, by The Prine Publishing Oo, (The New York Freniug World), ha just washed, and you know that) ‘s made of fine wn Y ey hesycat EWARE the Greek hen they offer gifte:”” t when | after he does that the place looks as awn, but such ® F Sh W s nd you don't believe anybody at) ¢¢ 8 most when they offer gifts;" a man most when | though it's been shelled by the allies: "| can be made of linen its rom arp Its. anked Mr, Jarr. he offers you flattery, and a woman most when she offers you| Fourth—Take a quick aurvey of the or of galatea or from. ‘Sure not,” said Gus, “I ured to, platonic friendship. canned goods shelf and do some light- cotton poplin to Bome people so dense it is It's a mistake to think a man must Jemons too many times ning caleulation, Then send Delia to but T got t adapted to every- dangerous to joke with them.-Atchi-|lean against a bar to be a good fel- Aang ‘nes the delicatessen with a list that looks psn and Pig warm low, to do it any more. When it ¢ ot s oir | like a catalogue of casualties, and an veather; can be rene 8 os 8 8 “p wouldn't want to live i €ldn't! uitity to daub om the sys BAkiogy wast ee vertset Cublsts in thelr) vent plea to “beat It’ At the same made from the heavy Perhapa you have observed that] Of course, if the other fellow pos-| jaye faith in my fellow man,” said ' he High color without meaging anything. moment despatch Willie to the florist's silks for the more those who use cheap materials always ganoed your ability, you could execu! ae jarr sentimentally - - to met a aqlar's worth of pause for, a PAG eg} or 4 ~ | his swell ead. "Tole d . aa ” . - quarter. nile you're waiting for ) Bae get cheap results.--Philadelphia Tel- | his swelled head. ToledowMiade, “ach!” sald Gus. ‘What foolishness. | All things come to those who know how to wait,” but when they come | Waller Ooln yon tt Aying tripe bardine and the ite earaph. a @ ® It usually takew & long grind to get} You don't begin to live tll you don't | You've gotten dead tired of waiting—and are waiting for something else. Into the living room, armed with bits to be admirable for Pity may be akin to Jove, but it’s] in on the ground floor belidt in any man follows.” — of brilliant patter on toples of the every - day spring only ® poor relation day; and always leave them laughing when you return to the kitchen, * | a needs. The blouse . All mon are born equal, and soma] "Again Tsay, you are a veritable} A man never can understand how “just looking” at a pretty spring hat preferably will , “ " 0 ce ran | ee A to the Bitchan, preferably | wi tely a lie 8 crushed to earth | people may look back to that Incident | pessimist!” said Mr, Jarr In a shop window gives a woman the same thrill as he gets by “just look-| Fifth When Delia comes back with ashe Pe imately of other lies that areas the only time in their existence| Gus reached for the nightstick,|ing” at a pretty girl ae Hole en thn re ai ag Bie me told to keep vp it SppaSrARSS of bal pir, My rpdlp equal of anybody. | which, years agone, he had wrested in 2 cream in no delicatessen store in the le truth.—Albany Journa’ —Nashy 4 whole parish” rush Willie to the drug} storo and, on the strength of purchas- Ing all your postage stamps there, beg over collar and wi cuffs that are tures up over the sleeves Rerserker combat from Skelly, the roundsman, and which was since re- Dear me! Everything seems to be gotting shorter and shorter—hatr, skirts, novels, courtships, love letters, flirtations and marriages! ae a contribution from the soda fountain the jacket and the h garded rexerentiaily by he, helt jing corte USC ra Fae eae FONALD, edged, of. the. jacket Letters From the People of the cafe an “ihe Argument Settler.” | it isn't by the cruel things they do oF say that two people know when |<reime-that gay deceiver of eatn, are. uttoned In 3| agarnt anid Gua waruingly, "and as love i8 on the wane, but by the thousand and one tender little things they | nausted every topic of Montoraties: 6 box pial ‘Te Dureas xf Vital Statistics, = and bound volumes comprising the| ror pelieving everybody In all right, | forset to do or say when he haa ing ed for every mem. wit une & year ale ‘To the Editor of The Wreaing World: , years ‘61, ‘63, "64 and ‘ 4 in’) doy't do it po more. Now I be- 5 third and fourth generation, when he! yards of material ‘To whom should I send appilcation ; good condition. Talso have an edition | jor everybody is no good from the Of course the war question, the suffrage question and the sex question} nas ahown hin his Rehing tackle and) sath wide, Ky Kia] irth record? f Shakespeare’ faye o i rst ” ‘ . hi jasonic apron--when they are ‘ yard for a transcript of a birt! apt {ae mauennesre es nee Senne " time 1 see them fi are al Interesting: but the only vital question of the hour that bothers any oth pie Wa TEE Y DPE Ee ear Pattern No. 8612—B. Suit, 4 to 8 years. Jacket’ and trousers? . H yen, p . Hut you are wrong. said | girl's head {a “Will you marry me? malnutrition, glide Into thelr presence| wige, 1% yarda 86, 1% yards 44 for the blous, 8% yards 27 inch O14 Papers and Plays, |It in 107 years old and In excellent con-| tr. Jarv mildly, “al! men are not Sasa Da mineae th hn thee fentive m AM Tarte te LM verde 44 for ine Blouey, OF Soo ly pret ogy RP A lla a Maser na, The “art” of love making conaiste in being able to “draw” on your] gil Yeon” hy dear Mr, sence ce nee 3 A reader from Union Hill, N, J.,/ papers, Bove ms vAchi" sald Gus, “now comes thelinagination; but nowadays a man's imagination is hardi@ dig enough to| going ‘to get. to be tanel LD MAY MANTON PASHION: writes he has some old paper pub- Ves, good part of it. When you beliet/) ot anything but « dollar sign, ‘ fent,, because it was impossible to|g "er BUREAG Feeraie Baialog, ie eee peiend Street eet oppo Miahed during the Civil War, 1 have | to the kditor of The Brening Would | that all men ain't no good and find ‘a prepare anything extra at such short ol a Cpe a wg by ton Sr ae rents ' the whole @ve volumes of a weekly! Did Enrico Caruso sing in gut some is on the level, then in your notice! You'll have just exactly what tate stamps for each pattern oonte lng the Civil)}Girl of the Golden West” at the Met~ t you have @ happiness, Ain't A “conscientious man” is one who Js always careful to think up a good yore ge going to have; no more, no less. eT fay Naapoba SPD eE posit , It 18 jolly to tak t week to week, that batter aan to Dalat a mga lo 0 *SCus0 Dafore Rising 0 git i Bo. anyway, Jolly to take pol :. ms Pr

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