The evening world. Newspaper, April 1, 1915, Page 22

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& —— Tove ebthitty caer. Wram sone wT dor) LOANS TO BELLIGERENTS. T needs + np teee te #u bankers o rf Karly w ( ra ‘ sade the tectlens morta @t eaking (00 ( wited State | » edvance whether it * approve « B te 6 lelligerent natio Neturally, the I that the Government could lend & t 6 end, os became 1 offi, presened neutrality This time Mr. J. P. Morgan end certain banks in the city seem “Pe have gone choad anleod® 100 or eo im France, exactly « American werchente og wheat of biankets—wit aeking Meir Goverumen | poe rt of seal on the transact he 4 Gutter of fact, Russia, Serva and Germany t ~ im the past fow montie establiched 7 , ra in this country os Bor what the private enterprise of Co. of any other American toke their prospective loan @hveed under its « Bay got ther _ FORBID SIDEWALK GRATINGS. { -* AN nobody find a better way to ventilate New York's new sub- ways than the casiest way? Despite repeated protests, there is ax yet no assurance: © Ghat toe prunitive and unsanitary sidewalk gratings are not to be! , ped thioughout the Broadway line. Already they are in place as far north as Twenty-third Street. Broadway merchants and property @wners have appealed to the Public Service © ody seems to have only the vaguest notions on the sul » gommission’s Chie! Engineer deciar eprecedent to guide any one dealing with the subway ventilation ~ problem.” \ Is sure? New York isn’t the only city that ever built a, ~ @ubway. Many Americans | »Lendon, Paris and Berlin. ~ get forced to walk through blasts of fetid, germ-laden air issuing from gratings in the sidewall se —s Instead of magnifying ght expect ewer smmission, but that t. The, e is no this week e ridden in well-equipped subways in yple in th streets of those cities are 1e problem into one of insurmountable EGULATIONS agaust overcrowding street cars having been accepted by the New York Railways Company, the Third Avenue Company and the Richmond Light and Power Com pany, which operates the surface lines on Staten Island, it bids fair to bé only a question of time when the spectacle of a closed trolley yto move overcrowded cars, leaving it for the police to persuade pas | fe expect and demand increased service, Commissioner Goldwater does not tell th® street railway cor feasible to run as many 120 cars an hour past a given point.” | The Evening World Daiiy Magazine, Thursday, April 1, oe ces retry c is [cee ~ Piles Sects . — — + | table, with ite derrick, bridges and | @ #hower of ribbons | ier aah 7 ° i sorts of moulds, is a soure : b! i ate, noth { OVERCROWDED CARS TO BE OBSOLETE? Mrs. Jarr Is Going Out of Town Sunday _| cons weusne te the hte aes vot Pah : Fis Coral, 119, 0) Vie Hives Publisiing Co (Die New York Bening Worl ° mes | Cen light-weight composition, sim-Ichicken on a white surface—-ali agar “jammed to the doors” will be a forgotten bar®arity in this city, | 66 CAN get away from the | local trains we coutd take to come | °F tWo at a time in the small autos Wit, Wisd fo Nantel that will in ho wise dainty and appropriate The quiet effectiveness with which the change has been brought office early to-morrow,"| out to East Malaria in We | CORE. wills Holds no mores “that oh abs NRC OUE a ee \ kde ta mee OUgH sald Mr, Jarr. “The boss | couldn't come out with him. course, they can't invite you for # and Philosophy. enn ARPA AAD ROOODO DD OOD PDD DDD PPPOE DIDOLOO _ bout continues to amaze New Yorkers. It needed only an order, le muk nh town cand “Oh, those suburban people always | PIM, and you havo to spend so much | §$ Wi fe’s H I d «But the order needed authority and resolution behind it. What the! king, the bookkeeper, | carry a marked timetable around and | ™oney on your table when you have ; " * if M Me ire 8 usdan ‘ Par } | may "1 wre now pl i : so much company in the country that| THE WAGES OF LABOR. 4 Public Service Commission ought. to have done, but failed to do, the | M8 the pussy willows W pier beg you to come out and eo them heorapaay: Ait i ==By Dale Drummond i " 5 at Mead i 4 \tiful out at Bast Malarla, where he! the next bright Sunday, And then | YU can’t afford a car of your own, By Adam Smith. separ’ ment < ealth bas done lives, He wants us to come oul and) their very next words are to com-| “Well, you haven't decided,” said HAT are the common wages pany by Pree Publishing Co (tie New York Brening Woe) The rest is more than ever up to the public. When President | gather a lot and stay to tea at his | plain how they are run to death with dare, “Are we going out to East of labor depends everywhere CHAPTER XXV. to me, had not asked if I were burt, Mhonts of the New York Railways Company says that his company | place, as we promised people calling on them at meal times | Ma ly kormorrow and gather pussy upon the contract made be- Sem OMEHOW { healtated about | #nd after her first ox Jamation had ‘i t t f ns t “Im sure f don't want to & in those cheap automobiles ever willows? tween two parties whose in- eee Dr jae n looked at me suppose it will not permit its conductors to put people off cars, but will refuse Whirapeved Sve. Jere." ot | body owns these days, on Sundays! “Oh, [ suppose so!” replied Mrs, terests are by no means the talking to Jane of what wax unreasonable in me; but of wet feot, gathering pussy willows.) “FT never heard of people owning | Jarr with a sigh. “But I'd rather wait | same. The workmen desire to get engers above the lawful number to get off, he really invites the public, Wait Ul the went : sitar wouldn't care. very much If I had settles. And-| cheap automobiles at meal times on | til autumn, when the pussy willows| much, the masters to give as little, i} would wait ane We Bi been injured, anyway, | know what those Jenkinses Sundays,” ventured Mr, Jarr, have grown to cat-o'-nine tails, But,|@% possible, Tho former are disposed | think it over carefully myself, “Are you hurt, too, George?” Dor- ‘are up to, They want to get us out) to their place and give us + porations what they must do, but he does remark that “it seems ahd cold potato salad why do pm splo | talking of how they are pestered by| time in winter, That's when suburb- | | nave cold potato sa ‘i 1 |when they live out of town? The sensible majority of the travelling public should be quick | thon, on the strengtty of our coming to rasp that careful compliance with the law is the best possible {out to thelr place and getting our A a ae = een wees anal sitet eee ee | ed A AP ARAL LLP 1 aananons + Can You Beat It? «es Sayings of : Ky | 2 lie Sweer foes \ treser Seu By Helen Rowland c ; ae Se: {NEVER band Saabs Wi. We tow Panos rar bones Soa 4 ) ‘ou & ez rougher thy M r, the Beven Hundredth Wite of delomen, { i ._ ? & A: / M ry . pe 1 oat "é » : ae LAVING ’ ae pe a oe A husband thet as we p w ond a wife t seith ' aud lho herp A woman that eheth at he snbaw presence ond 6 mee ; nh bet » y ' at fo wets tae with « to when I offer btm L188 then @ quarter of a hel and a iriver thet seoketh all the worst Dumps in bis wild pursuit A walter that giveth me the Fro Stare when my order ts fer sott-potled eggs and coffee, for I decline Ww overeat, even that J may shine in the eyes of a WAITER! A shopeirl that saith, “Yea, it te good, for 1 wear one MYSELF!” A milliner that tu « Welsi-Karebit Dream upou my head, an@ exclaimeth, “How beautiful—and JUST thy style!” and when I wer, “Nay, | like it not,” replieth sweetly, “Yea, | KNEW you would love it!” For she cannot “hypnotize” me A Woman that epringeth her French upon me unexpectedly man that telleth me of bis fMirtations with OTHER women, For an “Impressionist” striketh me dumb—but pot with admire tion, A man Chat clingeth unto his seat while 1 STAND tn the Subway, an@ seeketh, tho while, to flirt with me over his bewspaper A haughty Box Office Man, a glum hotel clerk, Purkisi cooking, Wag- nerian music, white hose, short-haired women, “improving” soctety, tango-maniacs, beauty specialists, fat flirts, old flirts, bald-headed @irte, rhelor who will NOT Mirt! ™ You NEVER BAW Ne Berore ! ) ( You DECEIVER!. You BRuTe ! ms | married flirts and an eligible bi | For of such je the Kingdom of Abominations! Selah, " ae ‘* The Children’s Easter F these were not war tines in Ger-yinjure the infant. There is a cute many the children of that coun-| Wl eh tld dl try would now be busily making i eas The ratt nests of grass or hay in which the of an ege and can IT'S A MISTAKE (THOUGHT HE WAS You OLIVER DEAR - You WHAT | THE J WELL! IF IT ISN'T BEC gas, (HY DEAR OLIVER!) CITTLE ) 5 CUMP of q SUGAR LOOK SO MUCH “Onterhage” is expected to deposit | white, blue or pink, as well om $ ‘ binations, and these are 23 cents, A ALIKE bright-cotored exgs, and often ‘ teething ring has a duck suspended rr mysterious donor makes glad the) groom jt and thus makes a useful and hearts of the little folks by tucking | attract! ’ some much-desired gift between the| In many homes the presentation exe. And ao this Easter there will! the me rie te sae be sorrow iu many a young German | Oyristmas heart. Our own kiddies are no be t eager for the Joyous Eastertide ne ttractive with the gifts that come with it are qui flowers and colo: ee, At each as much a matter of conjecture as) plate have a souvenirs for th was gre those that Santa Claus usually! dren there are chickens or | delivers. tled to a base It is not sur , then, that the; ¢ | shops are catering lars - dren, and during this vac | one can daily see seores « doing “window shopp!t bun nies and fluffy chickies receive du admiration, and longing eyes are cast | cents. at the large array of toys, ‘The sand) ‘Then the ned to the cover by These box om fol ones |r | Briusht colored marbles in attra ar bay jature barrels or boxe Because She Detests the Idea of Going) misnets or the ove, wile ie is rien fo Ey eo veutitulsdolis dressed | mas time, to Dp he girls | ribbon fe The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell presen | automobiles at meal times. You just |the spring and summer one gets al large array of be Easter finery. th a desig j listen to them and you'l hear them/chance at them. Hut it's a queer Boe aie ts making a specialty of| of violets, or there is an Easter Iily | say, ‘And they always come either | world!” Faster gifts for the baby, and partic- | on a lavender background, and t in such crowds in their large autos | = ee =| tarly attractive are the toys made|[they are those with a rabbit or a Webb had said to me, T} sudden it came to me that Jane “You know what I mean,” was the|then, that would only give the Jen-| to carbine in order to raise, the lat- | all the advantages anddisadvantages pray asked as wo laid her on the ly. “Those suburban people are | kinses excuse to be visiting us all the| ter in order to lower, the wages of | before I said anything to her. x k teu | “No, Dorothy, you and the run- ee T was going out into the country (hat) about’ shared ali the, trouble, between ather, | Visits from their city friends in eh ° path, | » dificult to foreses | morning to make a call and asked} you," 1 returned. “Now, don't try Wal SED EA EO Se eee Se is must, upon | jane if she would like to go with me.|to talk, but He quiet and rest.” And 1, this w |other into a compliance with their | take Dorothy instead, So about nine | suefuiy at her broken lo | terms. ‘The masters, being fewer in| gelock my sister-in-law and | started Some time later in the wy, when fpressure to bring to bear upon the companies for fuller schedules, Hea OF ORG tio aROe ~ ea |mo up on the phone every time she Hits From Sharp Wits. | is in town and expect mo to meot her, ordinary occasions, have the ad- “It looks as though | had no choice Fables of Everyday Folks Vaniage in the dispute and force the | She replied that she wished 1 would in the matter for some time,” looking By Sophie Irene Loeb of work, numbers, can combine more easily, We have no acts of Parliament In all trade disputes the | | against combining to lower the price | | off in the runabout. John wanted to both Jane and 1 were in her room, she wal go and Dorothy wanted to take him, | vivant you fine, George! When but for some unexplained reason I} oy ,.6 horses came along { thought w | ‘A genius in usually raon who “personal lberty" « fas fhe reputation iit Fiend, poeate ot his wonderful things, if ynly—- sph Sha who gets the hottest when some Journal. ee “It's my home-grown iden,” re- | fled, doesn’ marked the Man on the Car, “that! who can't « the liver is the seat of imaxination.” | Toledo 1 ppear dignified, tries ton= se Some men had rathe poll tax; and, really, son are n worth while payin, phis Commercial Appeal, 8 fe Everybody will admit that hat looks all right if it is we @ head to match,—Philadelph graph. ere One of the maddest men we ever! Still, nearly every fellow who ex #aw was a chap who yelled loudly for| presses a willingness to die for mia @ square deal and wot it, {country has a sneaking hope that his # ' }hand won't be called.—=Rirminghaty The chap who yells loudest about News iislialih — ee nich with | Letters From the People > March 17, 19nn, y he ‘To the Bu’ vor of ‘Me Evening Wortd What was the date of the I will find good encouragement by sing Mr. Jaques Barkaloo. copy of the Bal y) have York paper, date Jan, 6 ” B, 1807; a Windsor tire? He lof the Albany Chronicle, Oct Another ne” Newapaper, [1828 In the paper of 104 (Alb Wie the Biltor of The Kvening World Chronicle) it relates how “Bonap. is expected at Bow It “J, W. K." wishes to hear of an) Soult, has reviews eer older paper than 1800 date he might|that two #hips, of aa interested to learn that one exists| are being built at At BUNS, | =the Diary and Evening Register, § ieee ublished by Loudon & 1 N 3 Water Street, New Yor On Side Neares have the particular issue of Aug. To the Malitor of The Evening Wor! 17%. ‘There are numerous refe: When a gentleman and lady are to George Washington, the/out walking, should the gentleman be Father of Our Country. Also it con-| nearest the curb or the inner side of an advertisement for a school-|the sidewalk? Also when a gentle- ‘one who is capable of teach-|man in out walking with two ladles et ’ . "Je - L c| ve bee! nacted with TI turned to bring Dorothy in, a y child w. " ng, writing and arithmetic, where ghould the gentleman walk? {nsisted, “Jenkins gave us the HHeving in “young blood,” he agreed ' bottle” and a bird you'd better change | much, sevaritg’ Aealaae barxacdal le feeling of yesentinent tugging at my cuttingiy, Soild wan of that tygee 00d morals, GB [marked timetable ehowing us the| to give ita tial, Theyouns man got your business! borers and journeyanen, heart. - Not one werd had Jane said (To Be Continued.s scue ‘ : . ! ’ { 2 ‘ A 4) , masters can hold out much longer. A | objected. » | were surely going to be killed, Wasn't shoppin, and pay for ber In | Convriatt, 1918, by ‘The Prem Publishing Co (The New York Brening World) landlord, & farmer, a master inanu:} | (Daddle, Te Cae ree eee ‘atoca |e wonderful, Jane, that he thought of “Well, don't let > thant , , ; eturer oO) ; OW o*| going into the ditch and did ry Tate Tiswer Gente Haver 4a; yOu Dinner Diplomacy. | busy. He invited his prospective cus- | not employ a single’ workman, could | with quivering Hp watching us de- | HUCK i ’ . could = indifference to criticism in usually the | Mr, Jarr. “We don’t | tale five Sree RT RAEMS | kaow,! upon a time there was! them and he wined them, and the stocks Which they have already ac-| It was a lovely morning, Dorothy bola eey none nothing about it” 1 ‘Willingness to listen toa recital of | coming out of a saloon-—Philadelphia | “Oh, it we didn't go Id never hear! A business man, He was| “convivial” spirit was ’ certainly | quired, Many workmen could not sub- | was in good spirits and 4 charming Why didn't your troubles is due to a curiosity Inquirer, vd . ped rather successful in his en- | Present during the delightfi hour, sist a week, few could snbsist a month | companion, = nf > didn’t ask, father than to sympathy.—Albany so= 6) eit the last of it, now that you've set your ff torprises, for he attended |. At {28 end of, it they would part and scarce any @ year without employ- | Suddenly, in rounding a corner, Ul i inevoawary to, bother Perhaps you have noticed that the |Reart on it," replied Mra, Jarr. “Lut | Dig man who ought to look digni-| What you want roaming through the and that the little man, | meadows gathering pussy willows y your tmo of life-and do you know you are getting dreadfuly stout—L Pay a dog tax can't see j tomers to eat with him, He dined generally live a year or two upon the | part. * a) With the usual, “Lil think over that| ment. In the long run the workman | saw a team of runaway horses at- strictly to his work and) proposition,” and the majority are | may be as necessary to his master as | tached to a big Sa TAReR COM stood well in the community, still thinking. Once in a while the| his master is to him, but the necessity | ing driverless toward us. There Wl ’ ' t/Now, It came to pass that he be- | NeW manager would catch a custom. | t¥ not so Immediate. he time for thought, barely enough Fon seas Se orcs ua Of your husband, . fo develop. his dusineas=to (Sf With a course dinner: yet he was! We rarely hear, it has been sald, of | for action, and as T turned the C0) iii, that nothing could have pre- / wan to develop 1 generally the fellow who was “all| the combination of the masters, though | jnto the ditch und we were both] vii ie he had not acted. so . jbr inch out, as it were—and he need- | bought up" for the season, but would | frequently of those of workmen. But) thrown out the team dashed Baa a} auickly."" fi ted the in| &t seme help, So he advertised for “fll in” with @ small order, | Whoever imagines upon this account | Stunned, 1 lay for a moment dazed] eT. aiwave known he would i , a “young, energetic man with busl-| make @ long fable short, one day | that masters rarely combine is as ig- | with the suddennoss of it all and th@) nave an oct Tam giad it was Mr, | "young enerietie man with busl=|the ‘owner came to. figure’ up. hig| Rorant of the world wy the subject. | shock of my impact with tho hard) No ‘worte," dane replied Bem well cotablished. concern” OF | eee eevina, watched the process Of | ase a teat out SOnMANE Gad Unt: | reMatly Cuoraag. tet way feet, Doron], UE Jane,” her wister peralsted, it a we ed concern, this “dinner diplomacy,” and he found | # sort of tacit but constant an He suddenly Sprang ty teen tig | Wasn't George's faule that che horses course the usual number of applt=| that the expense account of the cam. | frm combination x PRal aciint rane | thy must be injtired, ay ale ty Peed | ran away! ee oer i i rey x up the prof. | Wages 0 bo! ol of 5 6 machine. vec Yo, of ¢ " . + tal cants came, and the man found a Pen Wah Sore SOURS we pk oa WVe, indeed, hear of this combinac Mader we Thad nor tree, then! 4."No%/ of course not, you slily child, t seemed promising, ; t because it is the usual and, one | | broken leg, besides |OMly, George had told me absolutels NCAA IREtE Gant eae and he made this comment to. the | 1 On® | ound she had a brok . nothing of wh : sacs kins! Couldn't you see that his wit went to work. Atl young manager! | say, Uke natural state of totngs| Giher bruises. Fortunately {had my | € of what caused the accident had put him up to it? Tl was just as was to familiarize himsolf |” “t's no good. Business !s rotting | Which nobody ever hears of, Maste: ier with me, and making her ioe! naturally. Knowing how little he plain as it could be that Mes. Jenking| thoroughly with what had already | meal-mad. if you must feed the brute | We semetiines enter into partteular | comfortable as ft could. L pre Know about a ear, F blamed his had told him to fish for an invitation | Been Accomplished, then ho was t0/ to get him you will have to Ko elKo. | amply eine ian ie aT aoe | to net the broken log, Just as farmer “Well, now Ul tell you all about ty® ‘ oO his "energetic" faculty to sue: be or even below their rate. 'T) a ate ratte y tes < ell, now ell you all abe ,! siivhie aawemei” [use his “energetic” faculty to aumgest | where. T believe that the (man | eee ee eon adag with ‘the exe | brought back the runaway team and) norothy waid, and in spite of my A MAKES doe tho invitation! | TRRG ae ok he eettc ate ee the | who really wants your goods would | host ailence wid secrecy ull tho més | wagon, whieh T At once requisitioned | warning that she must not excite hor y hed for the invitation,” | efficieney of the existing forces and tes i, ' 0) pnee and secrec; \° aA it’ a exc a Hine ad VTECH ‘ jevtending the work. In due time the if LR la workmen yield, as they sometimes do, |, "euttered no other injuries. | We | Over Jase as it had happened. And [ HE Sena new manaxer came to the owner and |fer Win the end, and if he inne n | Mouse severely felt by thom, they are pode Dorothy as comfortable as we Hele fea wauntng eee, en ee at's right, I'm only your wife, | suggested a plan of actlo a gd not worth | Lever heard of by other people, Buch | paving the runabo PITEPRMS tO G8: One DAlaned, nai alah aR ad : Augie a s b n of a n good business man he js not worth | combinations, however, are frequently could, then, leaving the qu ment 2 Are you hurt anywhere, George elittle = me oriet ™ darr MRE BRAGA litAtentn having, resisted by a’contrary ‘defensive com. | the side Ne ° ¥} Jane asked with just a shade of con- Couldn't you that 1 was aware of | FoitIhe people interes 1 in our idea, | “phe fellow who gocs to his cus-|bination of the workmen, Who some. | home. Just before we reached the Mer ais what was going on and simply tried | jew customers are ee Br oe tomer's place of business with a clear |times. too, without any’' provocation | house 1 went ahead to prepre Jane Nd, a little stift and pretty badly “L can't see how you figure that out,” | think we can ‘put it overs” T move | oe dinnenas an inducement to alk it | Srhey are desperate and uct with | "We hav eldent," 1 tol BAIA nTREr Ot on eianw ean Gale j hat a cortain mum of money should overt’. We seem to be running away |tne folly and extravaganco of dios. | her, “Dorothy: | ! broken lon nd oS pe put aside for ‘developing’ ex- | with the idea nowadays that a menu sara yho must either atarv ig bruised besidgs, but there is nothing | who was not hur te Jenkins that it wae very nice of | penses, We should get acquainted card across the table is. the apart | Race Aen tre hat ofther at Arvo OF feaiy to be alarmed over.” Jane had| taghe ton By t, that you had po ra im to ask us out, With possible buyers by taking them sesame to favor. ‘There 9 something | diate compliance with their demands, | turned as white as a sheet. “So ,because you were piqued over ECAR TO PA dinner making them our to be gald about occasionally siv- | ‘The masters upon these occasions ara! “OD, Supposing you bad taken | my love, and gratitude hecause yo wae O cao elie bi cs Cas § here is something about a ing time by dining with a friend in| just as clamorous upon the other side | Job and snatching the little fel-| did not take the baby, vou would gy really bu mecting Which makes com-\pusinessa; but there should be aj ind never cease to call aloud for the low from the floor where he was! speak of your own iniinos? T have him up to tt? \¥! clean cut limit.” | ssistance of the local magistrate and! playing she held him to her breast | heard of men being us of their don't think she did." Mr. Jarr The pwnes had not mone {n we Moral: If your business offer must |t)e rigorous exeoution of those lawa With such flerceness that he ried own children, but did not suppose the much for this sort of thi ut, be- | always be seasoned turned coldly. “Oh, but you were just splendid! “It was you that ace Vitation, if you will remember, rv rejoined, hat's right, blame it on me!" snapped Mrs. Jar, “L had to be polite, hadn't 1?) And I hate that man Jen- jar a “Why didn’t you tell me?" this time showing anxiety “You were so exercised over John,

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