The evening world. Newspaper, March 29, 1915, Page 16

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The Evening World Dail ‘ * one . | + 1m the International erate rool Union | ' Year ore ’ “ aia NOW ou . THE CITY PAYS AND PAYS. HE formr ‘a rohem of unjust taxate te whe T te tack effectively me going vew York ty Greater New York paye not or . r Qhen 75 per cent of State owtlayy a © W ene the rat of the State evade (oer rhar t ‘ aaa emtre joad piles upon th* © 1) Tnvestigation +) owe that some 65,000,000.000 of tarable prope te the Btpte is eaceeeefully comemaled from the lax aemeee re ON a. realty & notorious tax ut ' im the netion har eoch a emal! percentage of tare The habit of taxing and super-taxing visible property York City in order to cover deficits and keep State and city running has reached a point where only drastic protest and reform « ag to clear and equitable financing The city shoulders the lod ep of the tax date ‘Taft pronounced it for their fe! bein, . 9 ry © gaym, who dodger, but figures show tha pereonalt New The oty at id demand a clean es WELL SPOKEN. T THE laying of the cornerstone of the new Red Crosa Build- A ing at Washington-—a structure which will etand as a memo- rial to the heroic women of the Civi] War—er-President, @ loving testimonial, not only to the patriotiam of women, but @ the silent tenacity of their gentle sympathy and affection of which the love of the mother, the . Gister and the daughter are types. Admiredly chosen words, of a sort many people would gladly hear (e@temer. Women to-day are wiser, more capable, more active than ‘wrer before in the history of the race or let them forget, that gentleness, aympathy and affection are ly theire—to blees the world and call forth ita praise in ever QPeater measure as they mingle more freely and bravely in its struggles, | a een The more reason never to for- “NO RIGHT TO DEFEND ITSELF? ARCHISTS end agitators are alarmed lest New York becone Russianized. They deplore new police methods. ing a bomb plot before the fuse is lighted strikes them as) Seabversion of all rights to liberty and the pursuit of happiness. | 2 “We protest againet the introduction of the police spy system,” | (ented one of their orators in Union Square. “We protest against | Me attempt to introduce methods of Russia.” The anarchist point of view loses none of its naivete: To blow Pp buman beings and their property is glorious. For the public to @eard against each destruction ix despotic. s@mqanized eociety is more than ever that of the man in the old French eays to the menagerie keeper: That beast ts bad and you must thwack him, He tries to fight when I attack him! | Anarchy’s attitude toward BACK TO EARTH. places of men in the offices of a big express company in this Ss‘ March 1 one hundred and thirty-five women have taken the ’ city. Thirty more similar replacements are to be made . April 1. The company claims that with the help of adding machines, ‘werk in one department that formerly required nineteen men is now fone by nine women. We see no profound industrial or economic significance in this. Whe fact is, express companies are not as flush as they were. The @empetition of the parcel post has told on thei heavily. In the old fee these corporations maintained high-salaried executive boards, (paid big dividends and never bothered about the payroll. . Times have changed. If adding machines and the leas expensive @arvices of women clerks cut down expenses, who can blame the ex- for curtailing? ‘The express monopolies flew high. ‘press. Bat it couldn’t last forever. ._‘TRe genius of some men in too pro- be practical.—Philudelpbia : Hits From Sharp Wits. any shoe pinches when you come to pay for it. ‘a yes, we know what the word -bypnotised” means, all right. We bave two or three friends who have just bought a car.—Philadelphia Telegraph. ee A friend in need may be a friend, all right, but he te usually a friend who Is sidetracked.—Momphis Commercial Appeal. No wife wants people to think her Soabane {a & eelf-made man.—Toledo March 17, 1609, (Be the Bitter of Tee Brenig World: Whee i the Windsor Mote! fire ‘power? KA B Amother “014 Newspaper” Record Bo Ge Bénor af The Brening World: ° & veader says he has a newspaper 1807. I have one dated Jan, 4, end it contains a full account of 1 of Washington. Lf this can beaten, 1 would like to hear from holder of such a record. The pa- } ad ‘a “The Ulster County , ,. aLwWek © wwhat Was the Length?” ‘Be G@e Bihor of The Kvening World: reader | Soo: whorter plece equalled (wo-sevepths of the length of the lon Piece. ‘What was the length of each ptece? GRATEFU: Incompetent Moto: ‘To the Patitor of The Brening World I a chauffeur. And eo what I y is from experience and from knowledge when I tell you that too many motormen on N: York City trolley cars are incomp it, Lf their cars were not held onto street a th would probably go to smash through such driving. These motor. men stop their cars with a eudde: nese that ts inexcusable. They atart them with a jerk that sometimes throws standing passengers to the I saw one elderly lady thue rr. lem | hurled to the floor of a red Broadway of assistance the problem must be @etved by common fractions, This Snterest othere, t0e. ‘he oroblows A tree 124 feet high was ot mo at the car not long ago, burting and jarrin, her bahy, And | have witnesned ther such resulta of wnakilful motor- work. Can't the varior of start- BG Diacover- | The Day of Rest ie DADDY 1S GOING ON HIS { |} MOTOREVCLE ‘) | 5 7 cuts \ Tear we By Roy L. ‘T may have been the prompt- ings of vernal apring when, as Riise Carmen, the poet, nays "The sap begins to atin Mother April was evidently propar- ing to make over Master Wille Jarr,| and the sap was beginning to stir| in his blood, for he clattered Into the front room and Jumped upon the sofa and sprang up and down ita cushion aeatn in imitation of the daring equeatrienne whore thrilling feats de- pleted in lurid twenty-four-sheet posters he had jurt been feasting his young eyes upon at the billboards that surrounded Snyder's vacant lot | not far away. Spring was at hand, and @o was the circus, and the aap was stirring in every amall boy throughout the land. cried Mrs. Jarr. | fixed twice on your account, you bed, de- atructive boy!’ “But I'm only playing bareback rid- or, maw!" whimpered the boy. “Can't IT have any fun? Johnny Rangie breaks everything in his house and nobody says @ word to him.” “Now, be @ good boy, Willie,” hia mother pleaded, “Don't jump on the sofa and don't try to atand on your head and turn around on the plano Stool, as I enw you doing yesterday, and I'll take you downtown and buy you a new school ault.” “Buy me a pistol, maw, a auto- shooter,” oried the angel “I don't want @ schoo! suit. I want to join the circus and be a dead- ly markeman and shoot standing on my head at glass balls from a horse, like ‘Cl y, the Cowboy Kid.'" “You naughty boy, to talk that way! The idea of wanting to be an acrobat ip a circus! Have you no ambition to be at the head of your class in school and grow up to be a statesman?” “No, I'd rather be double jointed,’ whimpered the boy. “Don't let me hear you speaking @uch nonsense again!" sald Mrs. Jarr sbarply, ‘I'm going to take you down to the store this afternoon and buy you @ school @uit, I'll send your Ut- | tle aistor over to Mrs, Rangle’s to) play with tho Kangle children, so Bhe won't cry to go along with us. Bo don't you tell her I am to take you downtown. She makes a show of me In the stores, insisting on going to the toy department and erying and | screaming till she gets everything she wants.” “Ain't I to tell Emma?" asked the child, To WAIT The Jarr Family Copyright, 1019, by The Drew Publishing Co ) TELL oir To WAIT ) Arwote / ot McCardell (The New York Evening World) “A Sitney? You dreadful boy, what do you mean by such an expression?” “I mean fi-cents,” said the young blackhander. “If you give me a jit- ney, I won't tell her." “You just DARE to tell her!” said Mra, Jarr, with tense calmness. A little later, the cleansed and sub- dued acton of the Jarrs was being placed aboard a street car on his way to be bought @ school suit, several times too large for him, because aales- men and mothers are agreed that small boys will “grow into” olothes too large for them, (But they never do. They wear them out long before they “grow into” them.) The salesman came forward with the courteous amine due a lady when. she brings her offspring to the ready- made clothing department, Women, married Indies especially, but, dear me, kissing is not “ A A man’s heart doesn't actually where the sun of sentiment happens it there, a divorce, and been arrested at least four winds of Heaven cannot blow u; cooled, coer OmnTY Nobody {s so painfully virtuous grown a little weary m boy. “All right, | won't tell her—if you Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland Covgright, 1918, by The Prem Publishing Co (The New York Evening World), MAN may have no business kissing a gir) without proposing to her— A quarrel is the thunderstorm which turns love sour-—u give mea jitnoy to go to the movies,” | carefully preserved iu the bensoate of perfect comradeship, My TELL HIM Yes | Gorn To RUN Away FRO ao” OMY oF REST li must wave Pha e\| ONE Day iw me | . wretr ——_ ¥Y Magazine, Monday. March 29, 1915 Fifty FAMILY ON fy TELL Hi 5 an WAIT ( INUTE . pel ig, ae r ‘ Fao Sonn! HE Rouen HE! { E A MoTorcyce IS ‘SHAKE in(y ' HIS FARILY On HIS DAY oF REST. ror nase si “Mother April” Stirs Willie Jarr To Springlike Feats of Mischiet'|s\t0.cr 11 Auantc, ag temp’ ns 2 may “look around” to see if they can do better, from store to store, when shopping for themselves, but when they lead a male child or husband to the sacrifice sale, all is over except the detail of whether the goods shall be paid for now or delivered C. O. D, ‘The amirk the clothing salesman has for a husband wife-led to the lair of the ready-made, f# one of pity- ing disapproval, But when it falls Upon a child, « male child, such aa| © Master Jarr, it is a grimace the in- terpretation of which eignifieth “Votes for Herod!” “What style of sult does the little man want?" smirked the salesman speakingly. “I wanna a sult with two hip Pockete for revolvers and breast pocket for a cigarettc case,” said an- gellc Master Jarr. “But cigarettes will stunt my little) man, a smirked kingly again, ‘I wanna to be stunted,” sald the the sales person, “business,” but pleasure. change toward a woman; it is just|” naturally variegated, in the beginning, and simply “turns,” according to to strike it. Love 1s like honesty, virtue or genius; if {t {8 in the heart, nothing on earth can get it out of the aystem, and if it isn’t, nothing on earth can put Nowadays, @ woman never feels that she has complied with all the social requirements until she has had an operation for appendicitis, gotten once for speeding her limousine, Love, like lightning, never atrikes twice in the same place; and all the Pp an old flame, once it bas thoroughly Leaman af nd “self-sacrificing” as the man who has just “renounced” a woman, a habit, or a flirtation of which he has A woman can forgive a man more easily for cutting her dead, after a | flirtation, than for treating her with perfectly cheerful amlability, A girl often marrics # man to reform him; a widow spends her days|Kave you a spanking appetite,” he reforming men for other women to marry sit has been angel child, “I wan to be an outlaw dwarf, in @ circus in summer time and lead a bandit gang in winter.” “Give him a now,” sighed Mrs, Jarr. “I'l give}o By Alma Woodward Copymght, 1915, by The P Publishing Oo, ‘The New York venng World) (The New most peoplo don't know a W the beauties of early spring,” reproved Pop, in bis best di- dactic manner. “Spring arrived on the twenty-first, did it not?” “Not go's you could notice it," com- bated Ma, “Nora said that half the wash blew off the roof last Monday,” “How utterly bourgeois of you not to want to do a thing just because the hol pollo! don’t do iti” “Say, since you got that new en- cyclopedia with the last safety rasor you bought your conversation is en- urely too noblesse oblige for me, pees Washingscs Heights, will you, pl ‘ell go to that delightful place near Wyckoff, that Hank Paterson pointed out last summer—the one on the knoll, overlooking the surround- ing country. The latest stunt ts to strap your fireless cooker onto the back of the c And when you get to the place your dinner'’s all cooked and piping bot. We'll have chicken and potatoes and apple pie and a couple of vacuum bottles filled with Martinia—and i the Browas "i . HO ever heard of pisalce | in March?" ridiculed Ma, “Ab! That's because . . . Pop got a good ‘noll on third and brought her to @ fancy stop right on the crest of it, “len't it a beautiful spot! See the"— At this juncture Pop's speech was amputated by @ forty-mile gale. “A spring sephyr,” he gasped. “Let's all have a drink. "I'm shivering. I need two," yol- unteered Mr, Brown, trying to control the tempo of his chattering molars, “A @tunt like this reads grand in a 16-cent magazine, but believe me"— Mr. Brown finished what he be- Meved while merrily chasin, dollar 8 ‘This start, went up t " Pop was breezy and over-jovial, "Gee, maybe that hot chicken won't taste good! ‘Il spread oll the stuff out on the Mo sit on that ooay ground " shrieked Mrs, Brown, “I'd haye pueumonia to-morrow" 1, sit on the running board, th Pop seemed to have a remedy for everything. “I'll bet that little sprint you just had, down the bill, sald to afr, Brown, who was aps)” “Ah, but Just wait until you bito! proaching. into a second joint—you'll forget it.” om bua Lan eaian ts | y shin ia torn to shreds, I'vej# ® ®& © & @& ¢@ Ree ete strained my kneecap, twisted my Baile Boe iy clothes all covered with waite and lost my pocket Kalla,” and it a white cross on a red field. treaty of Geneva t of unfortunates in warf, as well eee | I rious rival in the mussel, instance of the fisheries expe: by the increased use of the eea eral hotel chefa have been experiuent- | /USk™ PY the Increased use of the ee ing with stewed, creamed, fried and} “The sea mussel,” 8 another ex- roasted mussels, and epicures with | pert. as been utl! for hundreds ducated palates have declared thay | Of years in other parts of the world. a : ‘/American authorities have lope ho mussel, ao long neglected on thie| urged its inclusion In the let of de- isirable comestibles. It {s oaten raw norsel as the oyster--when pro verly|or cooked in Portugal, Spain and prepared. is to reduce the high cost of living, und experiments with various other shellfish besides rduroy school sult} the him the whipping when I get him| ple articles of diet in parts of Eng- hore land, are said to be abundant along | economical, and it may yet come into oe — — the North Atlantic Coast, It is not|ite own, ‘There was « time, not #0 ae —— claimed that they equal the oyster or} very long ago, when it was generally ’ the mussel from a gustatory view: | believed that the toniato was deadly Pop’s Mutual Motor point, but it {s believed that in the! poisonous. The sash may be a straight piece of ribbon or material as lik: wide, 4% yards 36, 3% yards 44 inches wide, yards 27, 1% yards 36, 1 yard 44 inches wide, for the folds; 3% yards yarde 36, 1% yards 44, for the blouse. ms was the cheery response. Browns at their abode, ‘Mad @ dovely LL AEE = Dates You Should Remember By Albert Payson Terhune ee, ee No. 47 OUT. 2, 1863 Red Cross Society's Birth. HIULANTHROPIOT halt French, half Betee-bed esenstes @ e ilefield of Rolferine, just after the vietery bad lie se© pone of the glory of triamph of (he eoeneg ‘ ineprakabie horror of it The wounded wore ti-eared oF Hoodreds died *hore vee could have been saved by prompt medians The philanthros itourl Dunant @! onee resolved to devote bie Me of bettering the condition of the stek en@ wounded dey and Oleh for years, on the project Me inteeviewed tate ile petitioned sovereigns, he used off the te The present Kaiser's mother became ose of bts He worked eb 1 murter at one did the French Mampress, Kugente And et last plan bore fru A convention as arranged at Geneva t study the oftma- nh and to werk to \mprove it The summoner rent out as for “an interpationsl conference for the r f inquiring inte the meane for correcting the Lowen by A of the lee tn the fiela Fourteen nations sent pal #18 eocietion were alan represented. The peed fer such & reform is perhaps Lest shown in de Lisioo atatemen in 1860 each nation possessed a flag of ite own by which to distinguish tte field hospitals, But thie wae who frequently carried off am- ed and the medical staff, or out unded that day the Red Cross e and hae Oe Dunants Great Work The « drawn up by the eo: and for pi ring hoapital supplies and for of peace, Hovpitala were declared inviolate, ors and nurees should be regarded ag neutral. A society wan fe ed to further these enda. Ite emblem, the ome lecided, should be a red cross on a white fleld—perhaps in honor of Bwitser- and, the neutral State where the conference was held, and whose flag te ratning nurwes Was agreed t during tine Thus the Read ¢ yas Society came into existence The next year the de ite rules binding on practically every civilised nation n the world Hoon the practicability of tt nthe Pra jan War of ew scheme was proved once and for ail, 70 nearly 610,000 soldiers were alded by in 1877 the Amer # its presiding Ke sn Red Croan Society was formed, with Clara Its neope of work » J beyond the helping nd was made to include victims of disasters as in the John and Galveston floods, &c. Of late years fe splendid strength has been used tn the batt! t tuberculosis, Hy ite “Chrietmas Greetings” stampa one it raived more than $1,000,000 in four year ger king the white plague. Saye Montesquiou-Fezenaac, Duke and General: Red Cross flug is the symbol of the suppression of frontiers rity; it carries in ita folds the priceless seeds of love of neighber netion of race or religion. The ancient spirit of humanitarian returned to earth. And to Dunant shall be the immortal glory Kked her!" Mussels and “High Cost of Living.” Uncle Sam's Bureau of Fisheries course of time they will, be used rd 7 | large quantities by people unal succeeds In Its campaign of educa-| Th TMM eher priced bivalves, tion the oyster will soon have a] “hy fsheries experta state that it ia At the] possible to increase the not tood v-| Supply in the market for edible mol- Barton Wa al Softened. eee “The | France.” The object of the Fisheries Bureau | Tn the race for popular favor the oy ator has a long start, however, and the mussel is a very fleet footed bivalve it is highly unlikely that it will ever catch up, The ex- perts declare that the mussel is pal- | atable. nutritious, easily digested and have been made | untess mussel. The periwinkle, the ockle and the whelk, which gre sta- The May Manton Fashions HE bolero makes a really impor- tant he new atyles, Here 5 a gown that shows most attractive ne, made sleeveless, \o be worn over xuimpe of thi inaterial, The as la iree pieces, with upplied tucks that accentuate the flare, In the ilustration the material is silt and wool gabardine, with crepe de Chine used for the blouse and charmeuse satia for the sash, but the design will be found « good one for many different materiale. It would be exceed- ingly handsome made up in the faille eilk that is so fashion- able, or in one of the new spring eatina, or in pongee or Keen or in chiffon ta, or in fact any ma- terial of the gort, It would be ver charming for : mater! as cot ff crepe, cotton vole and the like, Many of the new voiles and new or. are mow their flower a color, ani ‘tractive, with broidered __ Pattern 8607: lero Costume, 34 to 42 bust, For the medium aize will be required 6% yards of material 27 inches for the skirt and bolero; 9 Pattern 8607 is cut In sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure, Cail at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION. Wew } BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty, iS e Gimbal Bron), ‘corner ixth Aven and ‘Thirty-second Sheet, ‘ork, oF sent by mail o Getaia § Stamps for each pattern ordered, "Pt OF ten Cente in coin oF, Patterns, } IMPORTANT Writ ir ads always epeckty: size wanted. Add two conte Prairies Ayr} ine Burry. See | remarked Mra, tard bath and. bh ‘ Four hours later Pop deposited the| advised Ma, ef Ising ‘Good digh igh dime jolly pdalol”

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