The evening world. Newspaper, April 29, 1915, Page 18

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a ~ t PeTantionnn wt 4 PCLT EER ' vor +» Pubhe Com Noo tte Perhienes Paity Bacwes Fur te ¢ Pyros Bub *- mea oman) naurur ry nt #1 Pam Rew | ARE PASC MATING sowurn rts” Tiers, Ot Dark BY Gost Senaret ot the F rr Vee Beraret ot wre Poe ttice, Yor sone MONI ans wort ' ate At) Coumirte 0 International Festal Uaion - Re “s ™ o —_—_ - vou wi NO 1 p,80W THE NOISE AT SYRACUSE. Wilt ( ’ ginger are « “ on ** ane i“ f The Aw " r fhomor biedly tr neible for the toleration of ma ' aiev is. Bot even ” 1 that the nai on > etorm and tear ite hair ower ' fedigiduals who happen to be prom nent in ite political If Bitty Suppose Henry Clay had sued r ibe a 4 Your ( Bupreme Court W a tumult wou * move i) motives end manly one of the would have rocked fram end to end with excitement and pare. It i6, indeed, a happy condition—one upon whe) naton may congratulate toe {that the feroety of ‘ partaanshep | hes been allaved, and that we can lnugh impart ly over Lhe diteom forte of the agile gentleman who could repel Mr. Barnes with or hand while res ng for the potent palm of Mr. Platt with the Harvard the esteem of Prof. Kuno Meyer of Berlin of speech is a commodity widely distrituted on they Did the Professor come over yrner Freedom | ‘The refusal to part with Its freedom of speech har lost | why { ote A PRESS OF MURDER CASES. Y THE ACTION of the Appellate Division designating three courte in New York County to try murder cases exclusively | during May, the city is again reminded of the extraordinar frequency of the crime of homicide in ite area Forty-seven persons in the Tombs or out on bail are under in dietment for murder or manslaughter. ‘Thirty-five are charged with} murder in the first degree. The District Attorney has ten more cases | to present to the Grand Jury, If the calendar is to be cleared by | the end of May the three murder courts will each have to dispose of an average of one case every court day. Fifty-one persone have been murdered in New York since the) beginning of the year. In seventeen cases no arrests were made; in four, persona detained were discharged. To mention only three cases widely discuased: The gangsters that thot Baff are «till at large. The murderer of five-year-old Leonore Cohn is still at large. Hanel, the slayer of Mrs. Heilner, ia still at large In the last named and most recent ease the known murderer wee pursued by the most claborately organized search in the history of the Police Department. He is still uncaught. Neither police nor courts can seem to catch up with the homi- cide habit in New York. e' -4--——— Bing Sing’s removal is now indefinitely postponed. Des- patch from Albany. Nothing sticks like an old a t- DEMAND. LOWER BUS FARES. EW bus routes in Manhattan, covering twenty-three miles of streets north of Fourteenth Street and including eight eross- town lines, ure at last fixed by the Franchise Committee of the Board of Estimate, which has been dallying with the job for two Years. Bus companies are asked to have their bids in by June 1, and are allowed to propose modifications of the conditions imposed upon them by the franchise. Despite the long obstructive campaign carried on hy the Now York Railways Company, its ally the Fifth Avenue Coach Company, which now monopolize and restricts bus facilities in Manhattan, finds iteelf forced to reckon with competitors for new business. H Miss Irene Cackleberry at her happy home in Philade phia received the news that har aweet sister Gladys was engaged to Mr. Jack Silver and intended re- maining as a visitor at the Jarr domi- cile in Harlem she was overcome with Joy. At least that was what her mother hastened to write to Mra, Jare. Hut when the stepfather of beth the Misses Cackleberry the engage! Gladys in New York and the unen- kaged trene in Philadelphia-met Mr. Jare his report was that “Irene threw a fit.” Mr. Blodger, the Cackleberry girls’ stepfather, was in New York on im- portant matters connected with the propaganda of the Society of Sa- One clause of the proposed franchise—that which provides that ; i gucious Snakes, or Married Men's the bus company shall clear «now and ice from the streets it uses—is | Protective Axsociation, whase motte ill advised. he vity has no right to trade off its responsibility for|!: "Ne Sauaw Rute! and whore Fe Albany: . constant watchword im: Hiss, Brothers, Hiss and Rattle!” Mr. Bernard Blodger, King Snake of the Society of Sagacious Snakes Philadelphia Den, always found im- Portant matiers connected With sa- gucious snakedom called him to New _ Better for the interests af the public would be a fundamental Provision that all bus companies shall operate under a five-cent fare or fares graded according to distance. In no other city in the world are bus rates for moderate distanees as high as those maintained he} the Fifth Avenue Coach Company, A charge of ten cents to ride ten | York When the Philadelphia League Blocks is preposterous [team was scheduled to play the 4 Giants 4 : a Mr, Biodger also confided to Mr. Temperature tricky, jJorr that he wanted to give “this minipteenae se snacnineh nena door boob, Stiver, the once over and to see if he'd stand for a touch." : ry ~ > Hits From Sharp Wits But Mrs, Jarr, learning of Mr , Blodger's presence in the city, coin- A man will pay a whole lot for @ You can always know a has-been! Cited strongly with Miss Gladys unch of expericnce and then fail to! by the way he keeps on talking when |Cackieberry when she said, “It that appreciate 1, | | nobady ass attention to him any | big loafer, my step-pawr, comes | puny fot a | Teuth may not be stranger than tie: | Pye ls around before 1 am safely married tion, but ite a great deal shyer—| ‘They say that every cloud hay « ail. (20 ™Y darling Jack, TH serateh his Philadelphia Inquiyer. | ver lining, but in some cases it ty gust) fee!” as well not to rub the silver So Hernard orously.—Philadelphia ‘T ave eres ladelphin ‘TN [warned to keep aw ean A man with @ lot of money ts at. (domicle under Ways & greal help to himself j laceration, ae loo Vig leg aph. | Mr The man fond of ervrcise is never able to believe that beating th » exercise. —Baltimore, Ame: . Blodger was y from the Jarr penalty of cutaneous The man who is a good fellow at ome dovsn't have to care what the] An inch of performance is worth a) y, Miss end Cacklebarry was at ge downtown think of him.—Totedo| hundred yards of promise,—Baltimore | WOM? ‘9 Philadelphia and her sister ade. i Star, Gladys was visiting Mrs. Jarr in Har- tom, forging the fetterstot m for Mr. Juck Silve rimony s ones main an Letters From the People silalbie baehalat, beowu ae again fortune, so far as money was cone had smiled upon bir rn The rd ity, and wil the horrors of war; and| The Misses Cackleberry, then both Fo tie Maltor of ‘The Keening World 4s the generals and soldiers at the! visiting Mrs. Jarr, had not) smiled A year ago if any astute politiclan| front who are seeking each other's) qpon Mr. Silver til f had suggested to the Legislature of| throats are paid by their countries, | UY ie PHAR. G19. a, this State an act which would pay! why should not the new boxing com. | fF the second time, ax said. Thon missioners be ealaries in the sum of $12,000, and, {p | paid @ vast they stoiled so sw tly on Mr. Silver addition thereto, expenses to the so- | Of course, we have no ac and scowled ao dreadfully at each called Boxing Commission, 1 think|ing or actual hat in the re other that M Jarr had there would have been a cyclonic pro-;Siate, bul, with the added expendi- 2 Torte ile tor then eee test from the rocky shores of Lake| tures of $12,000, some may think we|them to draw low for the prospece Erie to the white sands of Montauk Point. But awl Se the tremendous ‘mount of bloodshed in Europe and tive prey. ‘The plump Miss Gladys Cackleberry ad won in drawing the lots, Under the terms of the appeal to chance, have a right to assume that the | battlefields of Purope will look like @ gentie = atream winding its way h destruction of life at the front, | through a peaceful valley compared ‘Bambers, we in New York! to the raging torrent which smashes ‘acclimated ourselves to brutal- over Niagara Falls, The Jarr Family By Roy L. Copy right, 1015, by The Preae Publubing Co, (The New York Hveniag World), Yor ETS ARE | SO_ ATTRACTIVE McCardell leaving the field to the fortunate Mins Gladys, Both the Misses Cackleberry had intended to marry Mr, Silver, aided and abetted by Mra. Jarr, while Mr. Silver had never tntended to marry either of them, Mrs, Jarre had no grudge against Mr, Silver, She wished him no harm, but it is not in the nature of any married woman to permit an innocent bachelor to escape. So Miss Gladys Cackleberry had sprung the trap und Jack Silver was captive, and her sister Irene, tn Phili delphia, had “thrown @ fit” when she heard the to-be-expected happy tid- ings. “Don't be a fool, Irene!" her mother counselled, “Keep ins with your sister if she's going to be mar- ried and live happy ever after, for she will live in New York, of course. Av Mr. Silver is rich again, it will be @ nice place to visit, and we can cut \ SHE DANCES j WITH BARE LEG ( BY HEcK I mm anni > ~ = i fe, \ vo Gy ( RR RA ARORA AOL COOOL AOL AOC LOANS In New York # «2%: By Maurice Ketten| A RR A ARORA RAS ‘. \ La ay Mrs. Jarr Again Proves Her Right To the Holy Title of “Matchmaker” brings on another, and now that Mr. Silver is Ithy again, his rich friends will all rally around him once more, And if you aren't on the outs with your sister, who knows but! what you might become engaged to the best man, right after the Wedding? At such times young men forget all the cynical things preached to them about unhappy married lives, and have often been known to Propose to the bridesmaid, just for the romance of it, 1 have known lots of such cases.” Pressed by her daughter to cite one case of the many Mrs. Blodger could hot specifically remember one, but again she advised her daughter not to be spiteful and to keep in with her more fortunate sister, “Instead of buying a new hat with that money | gave you, you should go right to the florist’s and buy a nice box of roses and send them to your sister, as a fond remembrance of her happy engagement," added = Mra. Blodger. “If you go to the green- houses on the outskirts of the city you can get fresh roses for half the Jarre. Anyway, one marriage|what it would cost you at a florist’s| ‘ Teach Her to Cook! By Sophie Irene Loeb Cop right f BAVuINE and health in any community depend more on good housewifery than on J any other one thing. Yet how Uttle the average American girl knows of it! Certain- ly, she has been to school, She ‘8 & thorough woman and anxious to make hor husband happy, And the ehani © she doesn't even know how to peel potatoes or broil a steak.” This is the recent statement of Marion Harland, who for forty-six years has been teaching women how to live. There ts much wisdom in her words, ‘here are more divorces caused from indigestion than can possibly stimated, The dangerous doctrine that yome girls are “not fitted” for cooking that somebody else should do it seems to be preached on all sides A little bit of grandmother's phil- osophy that all girls should know, cooking would net ko ainiss in the twent th century lite with all its propaganda, The needs of the phy- gical life in relation to food are more important in thie age of strong men tal acuvities than they ever were in. any other period. Proper food prop- erly cooked bullds strong bodies and, consequently, strong brain, very girl should know how to oook. Every mother should aee that her daughter is taught how to cook. ven though circumstances: are sueh that she may not need to do tt, yet there may come a time whan such Knowledge la most useful, It RIT et adh hd tence site 15, by The Prem Puniuhing Co, (The New York byening World), tion, because i ts an element of econom Young women who delude themselves with the idea that th are too artistic for so-called “domestic drudgegy” are usually the very girls who become the drudges, for they make the work drudgery. Art is only the beautiful way of doing things ond the culinary art ts/ no exception. It 1s the attitude you bring toward things, no matter how lowly they are, that makes them beau- tiful, You have only to look into the history of great women and it was | always the woman of achievement 1) the world of things artatic that could | go into the kitchen and bring art there also. ‘The same brain that can analyze @ | subject and read @ paper before a) woman's club can use the same brain with its analytic power in measuring ingredients and making them pal. | atable, No matter how many advanced | ideas become realities the home unit needs wif) be retained, As long as there isa home woman must 4 eds be ‘a great part of It, Cooking is one of aanets, ‘oman who must forever be at | the mercy of servants because she does not know is the one that often causes the waste and extrava- | wance in that home, leading to tts dis- |wohition, On the other hand, the wo- | man Who does understand the why and the wherefore and how things should be done may be the real mistress of jany situation and direct her household | Resort on Barth." to its best advantage and to conte au 1) real happine shop. At generous Copy ra! XPE| Hel not morning zine stori inhuman we had to gaze with envy So Wags the World By Clarence L. Cullen such a time in thought and des mi rt ™ RIENCES That Havd Not ped Us: On the same day, long ago, when the first mail brougbt us three maga- es that had been rejected by if talented magazine editors, and per- turbation at a lterary supploment's ° picture siona, eb acattered that had ers trom of a cluster of beautiful wan- lets, bungalows and the like, from Pompton to Pasadena, been built by magazine write the earnings of their pens, Our Idea of Being Adrift in the Guit of Gloom is to have to listen through- out @ protracted junch hour to wnat the fellers just back from the San Francisco Baposition HAVE to tell ences the is modern iH about the near-naugaty experi- y had in the Joy Zone, which jesque for the vid Midways, We are acquainted with a man in sin he | Wouldn't, some y having atter promise o his arms and, afte | of learning how | his toes, he aba motives o | During the months: pieces xo on the bitterest days, that it made a] feason why | shouldn't have the help ddied-up male's teeth chatter to! p'men at ‘em. aw ¢ | Scranton who hasn't touched a card ® promised his wife he ars ago. Two days made the aforesaid our acquaintance had ooth of cut of an a trolley accident, r having thought for a while to riffle a deck with ndoned that idea from of delicacy. long, bleak winter the girls wore their neck- low, right on the street and But now, when the sis- dling days are dropping in, the game calls for them to drape their necks above their ears, and they're playing the game enthusiasm: Marion Keedy of St that the with all of their well-known Which incites Witham Louis to suggest real backward-performing Chinese of the Occident are Caucasian | members of the female sex, When women laced their snoes tn front, the gay blade with Delsartean kinks ab out him could start a neat tableau both for birself and the girl by gracefully stooping down and re- tying a lace that had become loo: But the we've rough-stu shankish at the re lace of the yory , at-the-back kind, ‘The wa singularly Kidful } themselves and others believe observe gallantest Chestertield alive, already, makes a uff, boobyish, sort-o'-Cruike figure of it when he stoops r to retie the Hopping shoe- girl who wears the laced. ar in Europe makes this a flourtshfui season for the ditorialists who like to make that “New York is the Greatest Summer’ a Buyer who comes here Once in a while from Pottawotamie, Kan. in August ‘io buy \‘"\when cooking 48 treated as one of goods for the winter trade really be- the lesser needs of the home, quently that home | lieves this when he is told so fre- C.D. P, i Mise Irene bud returned to ber home, should be a part of every gin's educa 'is bound to wuffer in some way. | Ntlon go to th |Do ‘The Evening World Daily Magazine. Thursday. April 29, 1915 Refiections of A Bachelor Gir] Hang woman if onto a ma cont-ta fs about ar safe and is chasing @ butterfly marriage to be he would be almost as eu after marriage Why te tt ow alWays makes that when a woman one is feel a The just weman whom a tan over before he tired got You Go to Church Davs the Cho ne frocdom of individual on Sunday is still re- atricted in the United States, Canada and Great Bri ous statutes pres: that what vwfil on other days of the week Is iegal on the first day, onty those who desire to do we ne » of their own vo- churches, Compulsory attendance at relisious services has not been enforced on this side of the Atlantic since the Colonial days, when the “blue laws" and other rigorous enactments were in effe In Eng- land, however, the freedom to remain away from church is comparatively recent, and it waa not until the mid- tie of the last century, when Queen Vietoria was on the throne, that all naities for non-attendance at urch were abolished. As late as 1880 there were ten per- sons in English prisons whose crime was refusal to attend divine services, One of the ten was a young man who had been convicted at the instigation Little Facts time « s « preserved by a mere coating of oarbonate of sodium, J, was discovered i) Egypt, and is supposed to yo SIX thousand years mum: has been Denver is planning wo hold a world's fulr six or eight years hence, Gregory Rasputin, fs maid still to contro: of Russia spiritualist medium, tmperor Nicholas By Helen Rov Jand ae hanging onto a collie’s ta Atle never forgets ts th ? n, and vats | . . one ' dele " ; » - be bar oy dite 1 hitusell, os thoug were one bot '" 8 then { huvhande mut be nat " tr ene the worming, Ue F * . ' “ee je ot al) men. f the pennies 4 your huebar take care dotiars 1 put t + ten human beings trem we ¢ i boastful about than he ft on your heat n your back with the in love with another when he If « eirl could only Ive up to the verses a man writes about her before peruaturally perfect ay he expects her aye 1 WE sorry for eT sim? my busband one who threw him In Olden ce Was Church or Jail f his own mother, who appeared | neninnt him, In prison these recalel- Jtranta were foreed to listen to nets mons each Sunday In 1817, lest than a century ag, Sir Montague Burgoyne was hal nto court to explain why he hi ne. (4 his religious duties The | prosecution failed because the de- | fendant proved that he had been ins | disposed, | Rigia Sunday observance in Eng- und began during the reign of Exigar, n the tenth century, when the Bab- | bath day was ordained to be kept holy from 8 o'clock of Saturday after- noon until sunrise on Monday. The | most innocent actions were con- jdomned, and death was the extreme penalty for a continued violation of |the law. About three centuries ago | Parliament passed a law imposing @ fine of one shilling for remaining away from church on Sunday, unless some good excuse were forthooming, This act remained in effect until com- paratively recent Umes, and inability or unwillingness to pay the fine re sulted In a prison sentence, orth Knowing. Andrew D. White, now eighty years old, of Ithaca, N. ¥, has taken up the study of oriminolowy. Tndla passed laws governing afrwhtpe in 1911 before any airships had entered the ountey, sold Dy the town at Pernam- It ts piped from springs eight miles out from tie ety, and it is furnished to ships at 81 cents @ ton within the harbor. My Wife’ Copyright CHAPTER XXXVL CAN'T explain why I did not tell 1015, by The Drew Publis: I Jane 1 had lunched with Miss Reese, and the reason for my doing so, 1 certainly had nothing to hide; but, not having done so, I heat- tated to introduce the subject. Jane Jatso said nothing more until the next morning, when as she passed me my coffer at breakfast she remarked: “When L telephoned you yesterday they told me you had just gone out with Miss Reese. “Yes, L met her in the hall and asked her to wait and talk with me for a little while, You remember 1 told you T was going to ask her to be my offite nurse,” I parried, saying nothing of Inching with her. “Oh, no apologies are necessary Jane laughed, rather constrainedly i thought, "Miss Heese is most at- tractive,” then changing the subject, she again made it easy for me not to mention that Miss Heese and T bad lunched together: Mit would dy you goed to take Johh back and forth yourself,” I told her, wondering if expenses wouldn't run up faster than I could meet them, “you need out-door exercise ts “So long as you can afford an ex- pensive nurse in tho office, there is no T need in the house, I've engaged the girl, and if she is competent I shall Keep her,” with an air of finality [ had learned not to combat “Well, | suppose £ shall manage tt somehow." “You usually get what you want, Jane,” 1 laughed. “When it is something that docsn’t count—like @ servant, yes." sho ro. turned quietly. “Why shouldn't [7 1 vet nothing else” ee'What do you mean? What fs th you want that you do not have? “Well, perhaps U don’t want it so badly a’ 1 used to; but T get none of your aocisty, no attention, no consid- eration. Tam your housekeeper, the mother of your child, but that Is all, and that being all I intend to have a the help Eneed for both the house a the child. Were I treated ay a com- panion, as a human being whose wishes’ were sometimes of conse. quence, why that would be a different matter, but T never am." “Oh, not quite so bad as that, 1 guess,” 1 replied, annoyed; “don't sit up for me, [shall be late.” Jane, deliberately controlling her emotions as usual, made no reply, though T could see one trembling on her Kips. I sald no more, but left the house, “Hello, Butterworth,” I heard a voice call, and turning, saw Mr, Pren- dice burrying to catch up with me re By Dale Drummond s Husband ing Co, (Phe New York Erentng World), |, "We haven't seen much of you lately, doctor. I suppose you are too ‘Yes, Tam pratty busy jebut T jour enjoy night “I'm glad if she did! It's tough om a doctor's wife having to make 80 many excuses for you fellows," Jove ally," wonder if it is always neces I replied, hope soon to be able to run and see you. Mrs. Butterworth herself tmmensely the other aary . “You don't think I would stay away from Mr, Prentice's dinners junlesg it were absolutely imposslble for nfm to be there?" “Well-no, But society is sort of @ bore at times, and I wouldn’y diame | you very much if you did renig once in a while.” 1 felt’ rather embarrassed, not |knowing just how much Prentice | was Joking, and not wishing him to \think [remained away purposely, I {felt TL owed tiem too much; so T ‘explained to him that I was soon to jhave a nurse in the office who would ‘he of great assistance and that per- haps then I should be able to get out a ltue more, “That's right, Butterworth, It do a man any good to work time, You reation, and then y. handsome wife with her oce eed a little rece u owe it to that of yours to be seen jonally tis hard on her, “L conceded, "Devilish hard! not many women. would be as gracious about It as |she ts, You're lucky to have @uc! level headed wife.” 5 “1 often congratulnts mywelf," "You lave every reason to," continued, then, “by the way, did s! give you Iny message the other day laughing heartil ‘No—I don't remember any mea- sage, she must have forgotten {t. Where did you see her? It's not Ike her to be forgetful.” "Oh, | happened into the Milestone Hotel to luncheon and caught Hem- ming and Mrs, Butterworth on the way in, Mrs. But vorth sald she had just telephoned the hospital for you, and they asked me to Join them, he Woe Wad a folly Mttle tincheon, Tare clus quite blew himself, You missed {t, not showing up, | told Mrs, Rut. terworth that { considered 1 had done them a favor lunching with them, as Ino ene cold gossip because ‘she lunehed with two brothers, patients of her husbands, but that {f T hadn't happened along, and you had failed to show up, why——" “I do not think anyone would criti- eta Mrs. Butterworth for lunching at the Milestone.” I returned, coldly angry at both Jane and Prentice, “Don't get rattled, doctor, I was only Joking! of course they wouldn't,” @o Be Continued, —

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