The evening world. Newspaper, April 5, 1915, Page 14

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| es ene Mae UNCLE SAM'S PROSPECTS. PTEP careful analyse of conditic re @ormourly sceruing trade baaner thw country’s the Nations! Oity Bank conciudes thet @ there te any ation in the world thet at thie time may e4opt for ite motto “Business ae Urun het country te the United States This despite the fact thet it would mean more for general pro " Auein “ue are “if the mills were running on barbed wire for feneing ne ~ and on steel for bridges, railway care and dings, it dees to have them employed on wire for entanglements and however, banks on somethir Qmere permanent than « feverish demand for war munit after the war has closed Uncle Sam will, ns. Long ~, remain « prow Perous peddier of food, cotton and manufactured goods in the biggest Markets of the world. If he is shrewd, standardizes the quality of t Wares and adapts his manners to his customers, he can salt away ions of dollars’ worth of rinanent pe Se Columbia University will offer summer courses in Dt ' plomacy and Coneiliation.—News {tem The world « knowledge on these subjects doee seem to show what the professors call “lacuuae.” ITH the idea of getting in closer touch with village needs NEIGHBORHOOD COMMITTEES. | Borough President Marks has appointed fifteen Advisory \ y Commissions composed of residents in various sections of Manhattan. Each commission has twelve members, two of them women. Each member is expected to keep an eye on his immediate! Reighborhood and report its needs and sentiments. School house meetings in the different dietricta will give all resi- | Gents a chance to open their minds and get in touch, through the ‘commissions, with the borough authorities. ‘Anything that tends to simplify New York as a civie aggregation fe worth trying. Most citizens now think of their city or borough @overnment as too remote and too complicated to bother about save Vaguely at election time. Which accounts for most of the corrupt and wasteful corners that develop in municipal administration. It may be impractical to countrify the city government. But as @ borough experiment the Advisory Commission is along the line of Simplicity and familiarization. ——-4->—____ Hark! Hark! It's Paterson! ——_—-42—______ ’ PROTECT THE STREETS. mgre HE new plan to publish lists of city streets which are to be ’ paved or repaved eo that builders, real estate owners and public service corporations can make their sub-surface re- Bewals and repairs in advance is as far as it gocs a common scnee way of doing things that ought to have been in operation these fifty years. But nothing is said about compelling telephone, gas, electric and other pipe laying companies to do the work when they are thus notified. We have rarely heard of any public service corporation being refused permission to rip up a new pavement to lay pipes when it had not found it convenient to lay them before the asphalt went down. A better way is for the city thoroughly to investigate sub-surface Conditions on any important street about to be repaved and to insist upon immediate attention to al) repairs likely to become necessary in the near future. . _ New York’s streets have euffered most from the fact that any- body who had any excuse for tearing them up felt he could do eo when he got ready and not before. Permission to dig up thoroughfares ebould be under the jealous supervision of some one authority whose chiet aim in life is to keep the streets smooth. : __ eH Easter seemed to think new hats worn with old rubbers would make a hit. Hits From Sharp Wits. Let the buyer use bis the seller is using his speech. while] The best way to get what one wants 1s to want what one can get, eee eee A game of chance Is a cinch to the] When you feel the | man who runs the game. anger, remember ho: mpulee to show you laughed at You ever suw giv- ‘Albany Journal, ‘The average optimist is a cha) accepts another man's woi everything except Dertain to money. | all the men whom ing vent to ange who for in matters that . ‘The evil that men do lives after them because the good oft interred in their bomes,—I’hiladelphia In- remarked Car, “to have the second- tell you the pair of shoes last week are not worth 0 cents.”--Toledo Blade. quirer, Mere Old-Time Newspapers. taps together, over the gallon measure, Bo the Bitter of The Drening World: Bim, Woe wal ft axe to fill It up and of the measure will each one another of 1607, 1 have the N | 2 Gazette of May 1, 1789, | To the Matter of The Brening World: wn mention of ‘Waahingee. et How Lenst What ts the date on whioh groundhog is supposed to come rit each year, DW. D. The Even he Comminent and trternetinal Keetes Unto wr “Mat Oo ALONE . Dh awe my POET Moet LAN ALONE AND FORSAKEN My HUSBAND HAS A SERAINED The Day of Rest 7 ant Tare 4% 1AM FAGGED ouT. | TARE ry PLACE = M® JOHN LOVES To WALK WITH A PRETTY WOMAN, ing World Daily Magazine. Monday, to New vot teeny “Ve Band MAD 4 SUODEN AT Tare # Gout LMOw OUR Ny ‘ € PARADING ALONE Looks So FORLORN “TAKE You By Roy L. 66 1AT are those?” asked Mr. lady's shouldor. “Bome photo art studies—the new Dost-impressioaistic poses, that Clara Mudridge-Smith has had taken. They are by Verdigri, the famous New-Art photographer; he calls himself ‘L'Ar- tist du Soleil’ and charges a hundred dollars a dozen for them.” “For calling himself ‘Soul kiss,’ or wh rit ie?” asked Mr. Jarr, jo, for, the photographs. And he won't take your pictures, no matter what you pay, not If you were to bog him on your bended knees, if you are not of an individuality he would care to reproduce by his art “Did you ever bear of this Mr, Ver- digri, if that’s his name, refusing any- body on their bended knees, provided they had the cush—I mean the money?” inquired Mr. Jarr. “How do 1 know anything about him? Have I @ hundred dollars to get phe taken? I haven't enapshot of myself taken “Why, I had a camera with us on vacation last @ummer and you wouldn't let me snap you,” sald Mr. Jarr. “I guess not” replied Mra Jarr. “Those snapshots in the sun show one with the hardest lines in the face. It's no wonder the leading society women utterly refuse to let snapshotters take their pictures, They do not de- sire thely pictures printed for Tom, Dick and Harry." “But they send their photographs by the dozens to the editors of the so- clety pages of the Sunday papers.” different,” replied Mra, & studio photograph is carefully retouched, and one can be | posed on a staircase with one's dreas \tratn down over the steps beneath one, |and that makes one look like Queen Louis and the photographer can scrape or paint out one's wast linc look slender in one's posed pictures. But Verdigri refuses to touch a neg- ative that way, He calls it ‘denying the personulity.’ He poses a etout person half concealed by @ dark drapery.” “But these pictures do not look Itke the fair Clara," remarked Mr. Jarr. “They look like a dim lady in a coal cellar on a*moonless night." ($e the Btttor of The Dvening World: 1 have a tap attached to a of liquor which fills up @ gallon when turned full on, in 1% ; another tap will All up the Green Carnations, ‘To the Pititor of ‘The Evening World: Will some one who knows please tel) me the process or processes un- ne in coloring carnations green? Measure in 1 1-5 minutes, and a! Is there more than one ? Other tap which will fill the gee in readers may be interest in this e@minute If] tura on three information too, DELL. “Verdigri scorns likenesses,” aid | Mrs. Jarr, “He says that is work for @ portrait dauber. He does not | wish a picture of one's features. He desires to bring out the psycholog- feal rather than the corporeal, he says, He wants (he soul, not the body,” The Jarr Family sean tbs, 148, 6) hue dee CUO Oy Jarr looking over bis good) Smith has a dark soul. Mrs. Jarr Wants to B met you, and now it makes you look very funny, for the bat is so out of style!” McCardell sue “Then your friend Ci: remarked Mr. If you get @ picture taken, Just wear some aimple evening gown, and let as little of it be photograpned as possible; and be gure to wear your hair in some soft and simple style— classic simplicity is beautiful forever. Think how you'd look now in a photo- graph with your head covered with a bushel of hair puffs, and wearing leg of mutton sleeves, as were the New aut ra Mudnidge- “That's hor aura, Her aura ite Tyr- fan purple, Verdigri says,” Mrs, Jarr explained. “I would like to have some pictures taken, but I haven't a new dress.” “You'd Ike to have a dress in the latest style to be photpgraphed in?" asked Mr. Jarr. ‘Well, that’s the rea. P WANT TLL ME&JOHN Cones BACK HE'LL HE LOVES To WALK WITH A PRETTY But Doesn’t Want Her Picture Taken, Son photographs look so tacky after a few years, The old styles look freaky and so do those who wear “Oh, is that so?” Mrs. Jarr retorted. “Well, I notice you got your picture styles of hair and sleeves five years ago." Mrs, Jarr shuddered, “Oh, I'll wear my hair plain, for everybody does; to get a picture taken,” she sald, “But leg of mutton sleeves are coming if one ts getting stout—and one can| taken wearing @ silk hi when I first| back again, you know. That's why I Reflections of - a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland Conrnght, 1016, by The Pres Publieiing Co (The New York Evening World). I IVE without @ husband {9 ike dish of marmalade without any toast. Te fan't the man who has the audacity to pursue a woman that is really dangerous, but the one who has the audacity to sit back and make her pursue him. When a man begins taking the downward Path, his wife is the “In- nocent bystander” who gets the jolt from the toboggan. Most men mentally bunch women together, I!ke asparagus, and serve them all with the same sentimental dressing and the same conversational sauce. They don't even vary the wording {n order to make it sound con- vincing, any more. No, Clarice, all the nice men cre NOT married, if you can belleve what their wives say about them. Whether or not a man admires constancy in the woman he loves de- pends a great deal on whether she is constant to him---or constant to the man he 1s trying to cut out. | In choosing a husband it is so difficult to decide whether to select | something frivolous and ornamental, which will look well in the drawing room, or something plain and useful, which has to be kept out of eight when the neighbors call. Most men make love with the skil!, dash and brillianey of a child practising five-finger cxercises—the only difference being that the child sometimes learns better, The best way to get rid of all your troubles ts to feel so sorry for | Somebody else that you forget to feel sorry for yourself. An “idea) wife” ts one who simply SMILES for a lwiog. y A re ya a teni ht ” Fifty You Shoule wee we Te Pee hee No, 0) APRIL 6, 108 ive ' crouped et ertcted im the midet te tm They had Three of then © Deki ruened man with bearded face aad Veary The goai of « eos of me bundred years ¢ whole be extreme north, & beyond ebut off from loads of supplies on to Cape Colum! Land's coast. The actual “dash for the Pole” dawn of the fe day travelling In ie file, The mareh pressure ridges und other handteaps work. the Pole, Peary ordered back the last made the rest of the trip with three By Albert Payson Terhune about It were quite ae good af another's. ther for fusive oak ved the Pole w ne In five detachment speed of nearly 13% miles a day was kept up One detachment after another was sent back Dates 1 Remember ~ Moe a “a North Pole Discovered. owt en Americ fag they bed jut he pi om & cront thet Joey bad achieved the bither te the North Pole eo erere, The fith—« big cold scarred shin wae Robert Bawte “7 world sad been reached” Por wondered whet ley at ued we thought the North Pole was in the midet of as the reach of cold and wes « besutiful the rest of the earth by impassable For centuries sought to clear up the ° baffled. mone the Arctic anowe, Neo one As time went on fewer en@ uid ever be reached, mly dinagreed with thie that some 4 North, was Kobert t b -. x ~~ —_— —_ - — — oe as Var warner) | oP Sonn Wik BE GLAD ) HY MUSBAN Tit TRANGPER M8 Jonny ve Re yf me leony ALONE ty HUSBAND'S / | [o ne oie. COULON'T Wace | To You - KE LOVES To Be os sae Danes i tas CORNS ARE TROUBUNG Loves To WALK wit WITH ME WE HA SEEN WITH & PRETTY stnnannnnanooes» Others \¢ Aw a“ fy. 1a TTY WOnAN A COLd iy HIS (MORAN ANON HUET The Mystery § eirived _ me | AVE G10 / LEFT Foot Go HOME MY NEW of the Ages wae 9% “Ow J eS Beat v9) 5 - A SWOES HURT 3 . a la? ret & $ OOO theo y 1, would be able to rear the For twenty-three on, he travelied int to get to the I 4 after every © obstacle after r nd overcame eet forth from New York on bis final and triumphant ¥ the Hoosevelt, the first vessel to be bull in the United st exploration, Peary bad aiready made one unsuccessful polar search in thie specially constructed ehip, and now, with expedition planned according to hia own theories of efficiency, he sailed northward In her again Btarting his new campaign of diseovecy at Btah, “at the hern gate of the waterway to the Nort!” on Aug. 17, 1908, Peary reached Cape Sheri- dan on the shore of the Arctio sea, Sept. 1. There he wintered, sending many the northernmost point of Grant began M. 9, in the eariiest was by water-leads and by in spite of all this, an average a record pace for such ‘Then, at 140 miles from of his accompanying parties, And he Eskimos and Matt Henson, his negro QuT. servant, He had by this time only forty dogs and five sleds. In forced Aarne) marches he covered the remaining distance, The Fina! } And, on April 6, 1909, he reached the North Pole, Tho mystery of the nges was solved Teiugph. At first glance the goal for which so many gallant torr nen had died may have seemed disippointing, The Pole consisted of a nearly level ex of chalky white ice, That was all, The | thermometer ranged from 12 to 30 degrees bs There was no slgn of | desolation, the dreariness of a dead Beneath the ice lay the sea, 8 | 9,000 feet (nearly two miles) without | For thirty hours Perry remained | there and making scientific observattor jback to civilization just in time to \glory of his achievement by claimin; nearly a year earlier, (THE | | USIC lovers with short fingers would rather work thoroughly and conscientiously at the sub- ject as a whole. They would neces- sarily leave ell parts alone that did not relate and were not absolutely required to bring to light the melody intended or the harmony that the composer wished to express. They would show in the most concise form just the phrasing intended (and only that which would be necessary), Gener- ally, they are satisfied to hear, tf some one else is playing, a composi. e Photographed, want a new dress if I get some photos taken!" Warologues By Alma Woodward ” tte Res York bv estas Wend bid levarimen tion perfectly rendered with the m: Pe a ain = ter’s exact intention, a Ny Ee Sa Ry Ro Bird false lodtaite carvings" ead a li@Patze gtd | are almost always rabos broch. | Mise Jones, in pale blue | hands show short Ot thie choulder “bishece vevities tye Abd ct’ | fingers. At the same time these same ldhing school stucco on ancesiral timber, thing in gowns? | Mrs. J. (with hauteur)—Something | in very fine gowns, nothin’ common, Clerk (in shocked protest)—My dear madam! There was no need to tell me that. We know. | Miss J, (stage whisper)—She's stringin’ you, Ma! | Mrs. J. (indignantly)—Lucilla, won't have you usin’ slang. it's com- mon, If 1 take you buck to Pay| Gulch talkin’ like you do, folks'll| think you been workin’ in New York, | ‘stead of gettin’ polished. Clerk (gently)—If you won't mind stepping this way I'll take you to a ltue private showroom where you won't be d irbed, Buyer (scenting prosperity, drifts in)—Maybe I can assist. There are some importations not yot unpacked, | 1 would like you to have the first glimpse, 1 am sure you desire the exclusive, do you not? Mra. J. Giggiing the twelve Kim. | berley carats'—There ain't nothin’ too) exclusive if you got the money to/ pay for it, | always say. | Buyer “(to clerk)—Beat it! 11 | handle this bunch of green coupons | myself! Un the tay rose galore are displayed Mrs. J. (meekly protesting)—I don't favor that green and yellow one my- self, I'm sure Pa'd say it looked bilio | Buyer (gasping)—Bilious! My dear | lady, that gown, besides being the | last ‘word in color, cut and material, has a history. I myself bought it from Polret five minutes before he | strapped his knapsack on his back to go to the front, It is his swan song, one might say! { Mrs, J. (excitediy)—I'll take tt. Lu. clila, can you see Ma at Mrs. Green's euchre thrillin’ the ladies with this story? And only three-hundred-and| fifty, too! | Buyer (becoming more fantastic)—| Do you see this delicious little debu- | tante frock of white tulle? This was! We don’t want Clerk (advancing , suavely)—Some- | and French gray salou gowns nimal or of any other form of life, Everywh ic Pattern 8617 is cut in sizes from 8 to 14 years, «ned the abomination of nd froze undings were taken to the depth of touching bottom. at the Pole, raising the American flag ns, Then he retraced his steps, getting learn that Dr. Cook had dimmed the ws to have discovere? the North Pole END.) fingers are smooth and slim. The tipe are more than often pointed and not short fingered singers have hard for the exalted position that they now occupy and have éel- dom “suddenly” found themselves famous. Pianists, on the other hand, more often have long, slender, smooth fin- gers, and though the fingertips are sometimes square, these people have been born with what is called musi- cal talent, and this has helped them over hard places without forcing them to the hardship of tireless and wearisome study. If they have had hard study it has been only a pleas- ure, for their nature cried aloud for i method of giving nt to the musical instinct that was theirs, To create this music with their fin, is the greatest happiness of w! their natures can possibly concelve, wre“ ees m_n—=—eeeeeeeeeee j The May Manton Fashions IRLS are al- ways inter- ested in costume ¢ gives a au tion cf the milt- tary. Here fe @ frock that can be made with pook- ets buttoned over the belt and with high collar ené braid when st ‘Deooenes distinctly soldiers 1 or made aped oughly well adapted to from serge oF other matertals of the sort for ime mediate wear or from linen, poy lin or other was! able materials for the 1} season. On the figure the blouse {= white, while the skirt and the trim. The skirt is & simple, plain parate- ly. while the bones My buttoned rig! own ¢ front. The pean ets are eminentl; convenient as w " as fashionable. [intended for the daughter of the) or the twelve-year size will be necded 2% ya, of material 27 In, wide, royal families aren't buying party 2 yde, 36, 17-8 yds. 44, for the biouse; 3 1-4 yds, 27, 2 1-4 yds, 36, 1 8-4 yde, dresses now, All they wear is nurses' 44, for the skirt and trimming, uniforms—you can see that by the pictures in the magazines. So I in. duced Annette to part with this for four hundred. Just think! A Grand Duchess’s gown! | Mrs. J (reverently)—Lucilla! How wonderful! Woe can tell every one in Pay Gulch except Pa. You know Pa don't hold with royalty none, | _—— BURLAU, Donald Gimbe! Bri IMPORTANT — Cail at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHI Bullding, 100 ty-avcond Street (oppo ‘Sixth Avenue and Thirty-second athe, mail in cols rite you aize wanted. Add two cents Weat Thirt: ied recelpt of ten cents address plain: for letter posta, 4 apecity if ine hurrys (After paying, Mrs. Jones and! -—Hello, Moe! This ts Nettie Nye of daughter leave), | Dooem’s. You can send up six more Buyer (ten minutes later, over wire) | of those green-and-yellow spasms and Bello, Noodle, Bunk & Noodle? I a dozen assorted sizes of those white Want \. le.) 9 Mue Noodle. please, mosquito-bar atrocities, But Lssen, Moo, not a cont more'n $167.50 a dome en, y'understand, At that, I'm | friend money, But you're an old you done me many a good turn in old days, S'long!

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