The evening world. Newspaper, April 10, 1915, Page 10

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{ { ' — wrartsene HT poor Purtishes Paiiy Macey t bor oe oe pa o ST \ Se 3 _ Word for the Ueied Menten « , t XS ® ond erate ' vt ( » . ee fox : J A Won VOLUME 45 | I y | ‘ orem Soa on —_ po ola nate | Ne Wout Dae Pari) WHERE MOST NEEDED. Ti ivoue tan Fanner Ph RESIDENT WILSON ' | a pects yf FASHION Ft No man te wire « e 4 hodwet Confer ence, “to pronounce Judgment Hut we « | bold our epirite | Decorate tm readiness to accept the ¢ it dawns on us and to | YovR auto Pevesied to us in the outcome of thir Utaule struggle Thie is not the way the man the street talke about the wer The latter maker vy fidence and proclaime hiv opt ; fem to all lirteners, Av mont—ien't it a thoweand times easier | ly to exercise than to rurpend it We « y find fantt with v Oar memories, some pl t oeree t who ever comp!ained { of his judgment’ To be truly neutral, to jump at r r fe, not to ballers @rery story of atrocities, to await offical confirmation { stirring Bews, to keep open-minded and fair, ty ee that hetwoen black Fork FASHION white are many degrees of gray—mental rewerve of thie FESTIVAL Bow ww rare The more reason to thank God that it is rtill not absent fr DECORATIONS places of high public trust where the nation has most need of it FoR FASHION ———-+-- — —— FESTIVAL That a fourteen-year-old schoo! girl can be arrested and taken to court in a patrol wagon because ale shouts some silly phrase at an jetant principal reassures New York as to the majesty of the public school system. Rut what about tte hu- manity aod common ? —--—<1 ——— --— THE CITY WAITS FOR NO MAN. | ESTLESS New York is like the Missouri River, It shifts its bars and eats away its banka until no man knows from one- year to the next how to reckon on its currents, Another receivership involving big department stores in the Sixth Mo Hw renee one The Evening World Daily Magazine. + enn a |Spring Fashion Festival «2: Pot CLOTHES on STATUES Tree, CORSET By Maurice K IcroTues rr CORATIONS TREE DECORATION FoR, THe Beer ‘Avenue shopping district reminds us again of the ruthless ways in fl if KOANED | whioh the great city sweeps business bither and thither. Walk west Uf y searutsl from Madison Square along T'wenty-third Street. ‘Tho once famous z V/s Hf] tg | ghonpers’ promenade is now a row of empty buildings and locked bath Me doors. No pressure drove away one kind of business to mae room CLOTHES ' for another. When the retail centre shifted it left its old site bare. Land in Manhattan costs more than in any equal area in the country. ‘The island is supposed to be overcrowded. How then can a central section of a block or more suddenly find itself as barren ax @eandbar? It is one of the ever-puzzling vagaries of New York. The city @erts now this way, now that. Business either pants in pursuit or| gets left. a Having conquered the absinthe habit, Paris now prevares to Guppress the tango. Victory upon victory—with lives length- ened instead of lost. —<-¢ { SOME DAY. | An Evening World reader writes: To the Kditor of The Evening World: In nearly all cities of any importance, except New York, street railway tickets are good ou every line, For instance, take Washington, D.C. There are three distinct surface ratl- way companies and a ticket purchased on one line is good on every line, Why should not that apply in New York? It seems to me that such a plan would expedite service, increase the circu- ting medium and be a great convenience to the travelling’ jublic. In harmony with your policy in trying to improve the transportation of New York, I sincerely hope that you can see your way clear to advocate this idea, ‘ One more thought—it seems to me that the traction com- panies should voluntarily adopt this policy. Why? Because | the vast transient population of New York would jay for it in the tickets they take to their homes in other cities, and which are never redeemed. W. F. WAKEMAN, Patience. When New York street railway companies have been made to provide a uniform transfer system that takes people where they want to go instead of continually holding them up and humili ating them, there may be hope of securing an interchangeable ticket. New York works more slowly than other cities along these lines. | It is expert at handing out franchises to transit corporations, But it is still a long way from knowing how to make them co-operate for its convenience. +2 -—-~—- ATTENTION! Easter fashion parade to-moi rrow, The city expects every woman to look her best and every man to look only as Infe- rior as becomes him, By Roy L. Onyaaia, Lu K, JARR was not in an amiable frame of mind, For the last three days he had been a vic- tim to the untold horrors of house- cleaning andQhad just stepped on a cake of soap and nearly accomplish- od 4 most marvellous somersault. ‘The carpets were up and Mrs. Jarr had gone around with her head tied ‘up and was #0 cranky that life wasn't worth living. “Why didn’t you do this houm- cleaning back tn March when every- body else doos it?” asked Mr. Jarr plaintively, "We've been camping out for a week and things are worse than before, Aren't they ever going to be straightened?” And Mr. Jarr, fishing for a handkerchief in the top drawer of the chiffonier, upset a mountain of newly laundered lace curtains and down they went to the floor, “Now you start!” said Mra, Jarr, ‘How could I do my housecleaning when I knew as soon as 1 began it Gertrude would leave? But the housecleaning HAD to be done, and everything was in such a condition, and I had to take down the curtains and hangings and take up the car- pets; and so I did it!” Jarr, “Either that or when there's sick~ nesw or company in the house, Ser- | vants will stay as long as there ts no | work to do, no sick people to attend The Jarr Family vy (Phe Dre Publiaing Co, z SHOW YouR CLOTHES — FASHION FESTIVAL EVERY WASH DAY ~~ \ | | of ofr co ketoo! nein aon its no wonder so many women live in hotels!” “Here comes Dr. Stanwix,” wg World) Mr, Jarr, looking out of the Were barking all night long with a] “And how are we to-day ecroupy cold; and Emma, you were in] Dr. Stanwix, bustling in, a high fever! Oh, dear! Childron | are we all? are such a trial and housekeeping 1s such a drudgery and such a care, | When « McCardell (he ew York be ‘And how How is my Httle man? And how is the little lady?" The little lady, being no other ‘here Is No Place Like Home” By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1015, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), ELIEVING as I do inthe, 2688. And in every home, no mat how humble, this principle may be preservation and Pro-| promoted with success, as hundreds tection of the home, 1] of cases attest. most cordially approve} in a great city like New York, wita this! eieaaute it labor-saving devices and detract- Th s ing influences, there is a marked ten- ese are the words accredited to} dency to disintegrate the home——to-get Gov. Charles 8. Whitman when this|away from it, It ix a fact that there woek he signed the Mothers’ Pension|are members of families litte Bill (more correctly termed tho “Child | QUAinted with each other. Habits are Welfare Bill"), the main object of formed and remain, To lose the habit which is to preser@ the home of the of home life is lose the ONK THING recognized as the great fac child. of wound living. Home in a Har Jat of two rooms may be made the It ts the first time in the history) pest place on earth, aa it should be, of the State that the home, as ajand can be by those who make up factor toward good citizenship, has} (heir minds to do I ad been officially recognized by giving! vet it can often Be mane she storey the dependent mother the pay en-| AVOIDED. It is in such cases that velope to proserve the home, It es-| members of it are glad “There ia no tablishes the principle that Mrs. Win piace like home.” This is also true: Alfred Stoner has practised to ugh | Where the family skeleton basn't “Do servant girls alw leave | Rreat success with he: ughter Wins) any funny bone; where a telephone is van Be ye leave) fred. It puts the seal of the State’ a device by which men escape comins ings housecleaning begins?" asked | oy ine iime-honored adage “The! home to dinner; where the family ti hand that rocks the cradle rules the world.” are always knotted; where the fire While many women are seeking the delicatessen stores and lobster pal- aces and leaving little children to} rear themselves, the Chief Executive | : nl > . oe. | to or no company, We bave no com- of the State Indorses the resolution | Hits From Sharp Wits. pany, thank goodnem! Hut 1 did | made at the Whito House six years | start housecleaning, and, of course! “frome life is the highest and finest | t your advice to be ap-)were it not for the things woren | tho children got terrible colds, and | product of civilization, It is the xreat 4 p joney for it ; Wear on their hats!--Toledo Blade. | Gertrude threatens to leave! And | moulding force of mind and cha * ? “2 8 la = ie it «| acter, Children should not be de Only those who know but little ry man owes the world some. | 1'¥e Sot & cold or I'm getting one," | ives of it except for urgent and! der the delusion that they; thing, even if he claims tt owes him a td Mra, Jarr, sneeging compelling reasot Albany Journal, {uving. Kuvsville Journal and “Get back to be you naughty The one place for chikiren ts at eee ‘Tribune = ohlldren!” went on Mra, Jarr, putting [home and with their mother. To kvep | Bes! old e° e o the home intact and as attractive as) al onl igg sleeping dogs le, ia an old’ ‘The married man who says he does | Nr Bead in the children’s room at | dossibie is now the foremost doctrine | Proved many times.-Macon Vas he pleases is either a fool or a | sound of little bare feet batter | of the twentieth century motteds tn | raph |plain, ordinary lar. — Philadelphia | ing over the bare floor, “Willie, you! home building as a means to happl- | . laquirer ae cece eral 2b Sa OR Senne to ° 9 ® . . . ‘The self-satisfied person is never; very satisfactory to others. ‘with chairs and things than to Ml a} ee 8 [big one with bluff —Pailadelphia ‘What a drab world this would be! Telegraph. It is better to furnish a small house —_—-. jow Many! Bo the Btitor of The Krening World: Here is something for clever readers to compute: low many different 4 be made of the fig- bination? closer to @ thousand than a hundred Ib says it will be closer to a hundred. AGW, A says that it will April 21, ures 1, 2, 3, 45 7, 8 9, 0, Using the | To the Baitor of Me Lvening World figures each time and not using @ame figure twice in apy com- be On what day did Baster fall in 16897 Mas J.D inlators,” remarked the head polishor, “appear to be de- termined to levy a direct tax, the bulk of which shall be paid by New York Cit "The hick statesmen,” said the laundry man, “are really moderate in “oO” friends, the up-State leg- thelr demands upon New York City. Down in thelr hearts they carry the belief that New York City should pay all the running expenses of the State and relieve the ruralists and dweilers io the small towns of any taxation, Sad iChe Week’s Wash {tho fathers are of love may be covered with ashes of poverty; where please, thank you and beg pardon are reserved for visitors, Where a wife's relatives and a friend are two different things; where the family cupboard has many borrowed dishes; where the sing of the excuses of the children; w many & man who plays the king finds his wife is ace high, Where a cold bird and a bottle oft precede a battle; where it is only a place of several’ wall ber in front for the the mail man. ‘Tho real home is not the ruled one, onvenience of Fome is an “habitual abode,” and everybody should have the homo habit. _ Cd we with a nam. | Housecleaning Horrors Assail Poor Mr. Jarr’s Domestic Bliss, than little Emma Jarr, fell under the spell of the charming professional man; but the little man, Willle Jarr, only scowled and remarked that if he was given any nasty cine he would spit it out. “Can you tell mo why the children get sick at such a time when I am right in the midst of my houseclean- ing, doctor?” asked Mrs. Jarr, peev- Isbly, “Yes, madam, I can!" said the j doctor, “Dust does it, madam—dust! I read a very interesting paper on |‘Dust as an Incentive in Zymotic Diseases’ at the last meeting of tho | Medical Association in Yonkers, Dr, | Carver, the great surgeon, took issue | with mo on some points, but on the whole [L was sustained by my col- leagues,” said the doctor as he felt the little boy's pulse. "We note that |in hay fever or asthma dust of any ikind irritates the mucous mem- branes, Grant me that and my premiso is established,” he added, Mr. Jarr nodded as if he under- stood, but Mrs, Jarr bridled up, let my house go dirty the children won't get sick?” she asked, “I do not go so far as to say tha’ jsald Dr, Stanwix. “Dirt is the breed- ing round of such diseases as phthisis, scarlet fever and the like. On the other hand, the destruction of {old edifices has been followed by out- | breaks of meningitis, ‘The stirring up of dust to any great extent is fol- ‘lowed by colds." | “Then, if I don't clean house wo {will got diseases and if T do clean house we will get sick, anyway?" asked Mra, Jarr. “Under present methods, yes," aaid tho doctor, “dust, dust, my dear madam, is dangerous!" and he wrote jout three prescriptions, “If dust is so dangerous why is he always out for the dust?” asked Mr Jarr, as the doctor departed, his bi yesterday But Mrs, Jarr said it was a shame jto talk so about such a lovely man es Dr, Stanwix, In womon's eyes, doctors ean do no wrong “T got LL save that required for local purposes. lip. He scatters his dough like rain, they spend New York City is paying “One of the cently made local option in the liberty and yesterday voted to permit | the employment of women and chil- dren twelve hours a day in tho ea ning factories bumped into an argu- ment about the State tax drain on the olty the other day, He wanted to know what we would do if the up- State folks didn’t come down here and - nd their hard earned money | ay, did you ever see an up-Sta legislator from the rural districts squandering his own money in New York? He doesn't care any more for on the desert of Bahara. Hefore leav- ing home he gives his bankroll a bath in an alum solution and every time he pries a bill off to pay for something he has to have in the big city he utters a cry like a wounded seal, “It ls different when the up-State legislators come down here to in- vostisgaute something, by heck, and the State is paying the bills. ‘They stop at the best hotels and every time they eat they go through the bill of fave like a machine gun, They are loose as ashes with the appropriated funds and they enjoy themselves be- $2 than be does for bis upper! cause they know that of every dollar j four cents or more,” eee. ‘ nnrnnnnnnnnn | $_T. R's Warmest Rival. § I ananmannanannannansanene) § e « E141," said the head polisher, “the Eitel Friedrich didn't make a bold dash to sea from Newport News after all.” | “We'll have to take our hats off to \Capt. Mieriehsen,” said the laundry » “When it comes to downright tal rival--Col, Roosevelt, “Of course, asting medi. | “Do you mean to tell me that If T/ By Martin Green| ' | “We're getting we decided comes first—the suspicion or the deception? nt in the direction of keeping his! son naine in the papers he has only one: liars.’ mnsee Saturday. April 10, 1915 citen| What Every Wo By Helen ee Te a) “ HUE” aenowneed the Wid une the evening paper te smash, another of the beat of matrimony knows who rocks the boat of matri We a litle beht on the subject, “Of course, Mr gels the diver tut the real ve The Weatherby,” he rounds, ke coffee gro can't see them, u mieht yulde't do any er of whieh, might be true, suoner of latereif not about ble thin, And @ Woman always does drive Hechelor, “if not the tliret time—why, { The First “White Lie” and ite J +“ leaily Va the firet little white b cloud of suspicion which repre, and the rain of reeriminat) Le solve. WHO causes the firm de man's tendency Which Will be more effective? eweet old He to the bitter truth yim that way ou have it!" exclaimed t uniess it is sugar vineing us a Kood He, and honest with her Or is " to a woman about tells her the tru n Hive ishly fibbing naturally, when h she's aumpicloun of t “Nonsense!” acoffed the Hachelo of suapicto “And @ man's innat the Widow, “which causes him to do ome WHO “ROCKS THE BOAT OF MATRIMONY?” Why 4i4 he desert ber if he I ) ( Understand him of because qhe could them,” suggested the Bachelor, he ” ghe ane and He wold way that ver to offer a woman the truth if he used moat of the trouble since Ada making her bite the a man Think Rowland nee ee a ha! te het & headline eprend 1 ae whe poinin’d be ie ehother perfer'iy goed marriage dition Ww the yearly divoree crop: end whe Fed the Marhelor, touching (he match te bie € * wghed the Witow “Nobody ever mony—net even the oooupante t evidence might t Giant whet well bred sooty. hidden of (he bottom where 1 beeawer that te Hoth A man at about litte ted the all the rest of the reve 4 eee UT it's the ‘first time’ that counts!" deciared the Widow, emphat. that develops inte the big wom the nderstorm end the hat of That te juat (he pont 1 am trying it in love and matrimony? fait t can think of @ Qe it the Womuns® tendency lo prefer e nan made naturally deceitful or does he Bachelor, “A we n doesn't want vated and aweetened and spiced until it sounde ea it Impossible for ar her passion ple fi somethi th about r. “it's the woman's Innate attitude which forces a man to be deceitful.” attitude of self-« efence toward a woman,” refoined the things that make her suspicious.” “Lots of men,” declared the Bachelor, “would never have thouht of doing anything thetr wives might dis: ut It into their heads by a a@ natural genius for disc using them of it. vering the particuls approve of if their wives had not firs Every woman seens to have sins her husband would LIKE to commit and then accusing him of committing them before he hac had time to. “Beeaus retorted the Widow, * that her husband's mind ts wandering it himself; and she yearns to warn hi “Humph!" sniffed the Bachelor, ‘every woman has a natural intulttor In that direction long before he know. m againat the rocks.” ‘and like an amateur chauffeur @hy always drives him right onto the rocks!” 3 The Supreme Shock of the Serie RRA OY ae said the Widow, “and sometimes finds that he has been head- ing for them long before she bride’s life, Mr, Weatherby, thing and discover that her accusations are actually TRUE! ' hing doesn't seom as If we could unwind it, does it?" more tangled up tn our argumeut every minute, “It rocks the boat of matrimony?” “We don't know, and we one thing is certain; if they could and hold on tight it would never be overturned, married, if you posing i flirt, as y in the Tipperary hat"-—— wid never saw he ied the Bache! her hair was really “Of course not cubist touch; and if 0 alluringly? : eid she?” murmured the Bachel ‘The Widow rose and extended “MUST you go, Mr. Weatherby you didn't see “git down!" pleaded the Bachelor, taking her } gently pushing her back in her chatr, never will know!" returned the Widow. both stay right in the middle of the Boat suspected it, The greatest shock of a , Is to accuse her husband of some- sighed the Bachelor. Which have Who is it thar “But For instance, after YOU are ou did last night, with that redheaded lor promplly, “Besides, I didn’t thin’ * mocked the Widow, “It was merely Titian with ® her, why did she suiile BACK at yor light. lor with a look of innocent ¢ r hand with a freezing smile. ashe asked sweetly. nd in both of his an u're rocking the boa‘! “Sit down! Y. ‘And then the Widow smiled and the storm was over, My Conyriaht, CHAPTER XXIX, wok Mra, Prentice directly to the hospital, stopping at the station only long enough to wire Dr. ‘Wobb. Misa Reeco, the nurse, at once undertook to do what she could for me, personally offering to deliver a letter Dr. Webb had given mo to tho head surgeon. He recelved me at once, and made me feel quite at home, congratulating me on being fortunate enough to secure the ser- vices of Miss Reece for my patient. When I left him ho gave moe a hearty handshake, telling me he hoped I would be happy among them. I now went directly to a good hotel, had intended going to a cheaper toes but I felt that I had already so identified myself with a wealthy patient that it would be poor policy to go to @ second rate hotel, ‘After a bath, a good dinner, and a visit to the hospital I wrote Jane a short note before going to bed. I told her that I had @ patient on the train whose husband reminded me of Mr. Hemming, and that she had been taken to the Lumly Hospital. But I said nothing of the nurse, nor of the wealth of the patient, ‘The next morning I had a short note from Jane saying the new doc- tor had been to see Dorothy and that they both liked him very much, “He is more natural, less embar- rassed than when you were beside him, she wrote, “Dorothy is quite in love with him, he is #0 gentle with her," Then a little further down: “John told Dr. Landon that he was going to be a big surgeon when he craw up so he could make the other doctors. do as he wanted them to. Where do you suppose the child ever got such ideas?” I laughed heartily over this part of her letter. So the little rascal was going to be a surgeon? Well, T hoped that he wonld, and T believe dashing out to sea and escaping the Hritish and French cruisers, ‘Chere is only one way to sea out of Hampton Roads and the enemy's ships had that blocked, But tho captain cheerfully tossed his bluff until the last minute and then calmly interned his vessel.” ——rrn 3 Rank ingratitude. } ——e—eee—e—e—eeeeee—s> said the head polisher, “that Billy Sunday saye the reporters covering his Pater- performances are ‘dirty Uttle’ “How harper than a serpent's ‘apt. Thierichsen never tooth,” remarked the laundry man, entertained for ® minute an idea of “it is to have a thankless evangelist.” Wife’s Husband -==By Dale Drummond TIS. by The Prewa Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), that from that moment not my love but my Interest in the litte chap was greater than ever before. Just at the close of her letter Jane sal “Lam going for a ride in the Heme mings car, so will close, As ever, yours, Jane, ‘Curse the Hemmings car!" I ex- ded as I threw the letter down, en laughed u little to think how silly 1 was, I slept heavily and was wakened in the morning by the boy with & wire from Dr. Webb saying. he would perform the operation for Mra, Prentice if his diagnosis agreed with mino and if he found an operation necessary; that he would be in Chi- cago the next day. With what impatience IT watted hie verdict can better be imagined than told, | was in a cold perspiration, as T thought he might perhaps disprove my conclusions, and his opinion be adverse to what I had advised as being absolutely necessary, T went to the hospital, made a perfunctory cail -nothing more would be done until Dr. Webb arrived--then spent most of the day walking the streets. I pretended to myself that T was house hunting, but I did it tn a half- hearted way that had no rovults ex- cept to make me tired and cross and to wonder how I was to pay the heavy rents T had had quoted to me in my aimless wanderings. When I returned to the hotel to dress for dinner [ took myself severe- ly to task for the way T was acting; and, sitting down, I called for a city directory and made a list of real es- tate agents; then wrote several letters telling them exact!y whot | wanted. the locality in which T felt it neces. sary to live, and the limit of what T would pay. When this was finished and the letters posted 1 felt better, and after my dinner went to the the- atre, T must not allow a hint of ner- vousnese to appear on the morrow, so I aelected a rousing farce, and laughed until I ached at the clever dialogue and acting. The next day, after my visit to the hospital to see that there had been no change in the condition of the patient, T went to the station to meet Dr, Webb. T did not see him leave the train, and a re. sounding slap on the back was my first intimation of his presence, “Well, you didn't waste any time, young man!” was his hearty greet: ing ax we shook hands. “How's the patient?” “You shall judge for yourself now that you are here. T should prefer— under the clreumstances—that you would not question me until you have seen her.” The doctor looked keenly at me for a moment, then his face Ht up with a good natured, approving smile and: “That's right, Butterworth, stand on your own legs,” he repli (To Be Continued.) The LADY alwerve : i }

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