The evening world. Newspaper, May 1, 1915, Page 3

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GOV. WHITMAN CAN SAVE THE TAXPAYERS $970,000 IN TWO BRAZEN GRABS 02 - Two-Thirds of This Amount for the Up-State Republi can Maw-——Other Third for “Printing,” Twice Paid. Twe big Hom: Ger, Whitmes AB iporease in the eyprop’ ebendoned canals needing no re; AB imoreanse of 100 per con for legislative printing, sald attempt to get hold of money closed. The amount is Total in two ite $670,000 for Hungry Republicans And $300,000 bes -toaders om the canals, although there are 160 miles @f BOW canal Beeding no repairs, repiseing 160 miles of fewer thas lest year The increase amounted to Inerense bel Why © direct tax of 020,400,000, Gov, Wetmant a Mystery Fund On cate the taspayers: riation for repairs amd pairs, and the locks ere tin the appropriations pleinly ea for @ purpose pot dis 300,000 By Martin Green, (Bpecial Staff Correapondent of The Evening World) ALBANY, May usable raid on the treasury is contemy for cana! conatruction purposes ftem of $670,000, equally indefensible, is involved in the appropriation for! repal: In showing how the and lock tenders on the cunal and how Gov. Whitm ‘The Evening World showed yesterday how an ines- | plated in (he appropriation of $3,600,000 n can halt tt Another system. ppropriation for canal construction te a | -BS SVHFiRe Last of 0 Gevtn of lnteretomy With Sie Gusenne Comcht, Whe es Added to the Buty of * do wis wis sion | la Fitting Expr uty of Soul Not Enough, Vibrant Life Force Must Be Added Perfect Body | Nor mpUTe TD Tr Man 4 Wbng MOTWE | AMTSTIC SOME 1S aROuseD, VERY SOUL AUANENED * of Beautiful Soul. plain grab The Kvening World did not refer to the political aspects of the| No Woman Too Good or Too Clever to Neglect Be- | ing as Beautiful as Nature Permits Beauty of matter, of which there are plenty, jowever, in considering the approp! tion for repairs and lock tenders it will be necessary to go into the politic for nothing but politics and political spoils is behind it. might find in this sufficient cause for calling a spec! The total appropri this year amount to $! Gov. Whitman | session. ons for repairs and lock tenders on the canals for 000, Of this sum $390,000 is appropriated in the @upply bill ao aa to be immediately available, and $940,000 is appropriated in the general appropriations bill for use during the fecal year beginning Oct. 4, 1016. The total appropriation for repatre @—————__ and locktenders on the canals for last | year was $600,000, It was all in the @eneral appropriations bill, The dit- ference between last year's appropri- ation and this year's appropriation Is $670,000, an item of expense which Gov. Whitman can allow to be fast- ened on the taxpayers of the State or be saved to them, Te must be recalled that $600,000 was sufficient last year for repairs and locktenders on the canals, Now here ie what has happened to the canal system: LOCKTENDERS, NO LOCKS; RE- RS, NO CANAL. On the Champlain Canal forty miles of old canal have been abandoned and replaced by new canal, In the Mohawk Valley and west of Rochest- | er 120 miles of canal have been aban- | doned and replaced by new canal; a total of 160 miles of old canal aban- doned and repiaced by a new and up- | to-date waterway. On the new barge canal there are | but on-fifth of the locks that #o nu- merously crossed the old canal. And, owing to the use of electricity improved machinery, the operation of the locks calls for fewer men, Cer- tainly with fewer and more economt- cal locks there can be no excuse for fan Increase in the force of locktend- ers. So that feature of the appropri- ation is a grab on its face. As to repairs, it is indisputanie that the abandoned sections of the; canal need no repairs. And the new sections of the canal are practically | brand new and need no repairs, So right here we eliminate 160 miles of canal from repair necessity, Th obviously, should call for a big de- crease in the item of repair expenses. Instead of a reduction we find an increase, More than twice as much is asked for as was required last year, and we have 160 miles of spick and @pan brand new canal, with fewer Jocks in operation, There must be a reason for this in- | crease. The reason is that the Re- publican bosses along the canal want, to put from 1,600 to 1,900 men to work this summer and fall. ALL FOR THE BENEFIT OF RE- PUBLICAN PATRIOTS. These 1,600 to 1,900 men will all be Republican patriote willing to work for $3 a day or more on a job which requires practically no labor at all Work of aome sort will be found for them—if the deal goes through—but none will be required to work up more than a mild perspiration all summer long, The acheme eontemplites estab- Nehing @ payroll of about $90,000 a month for repairs. In seven months hora” adasahioda bate,000 ag basil “oo Propriations, The balance would go to political favorites appointed to the Position of lock tender. Of course there will be no competitive examina- tion for the 1,600 to 1,900 willing workers. * There is the true situation about repairs and jock tenders on the canals. The taxpayers of the State are called upon to put up $670,000 that a couple of thousand up-State workers may be fed at the public trough to the benefit of politicians in the counties through which the canal passes. New York City’s share of thie burden will be $469,000. Passing on to the next exhibit we find ourselves confronted by a large, |Juley item of $300,000 for legislative printing, This item appearm twice, once in the General Appropriations Bill, again in the Supply Bill, PAYING SAME PRINTING BILL TWICE. 7 copy to the printer, but even the most . | Profligate of legislators will not claim and) that the Supply Bill of $300,000 wil! tn take care of the printing ex- | penses for this eeasion. It should be j borne In mind by taxpayers thot each | Le appropr moni | its own printing, and the Leg’ of 1914 paid its printing bills, ature ates y for ure | The Supply Bll item cares for the printing of the Legislature of tl But, lo! tn the General Appro- priations Bill we find another $300,- 000. This dental. year duplication was not aeel- Minority) Leaders Wagner in, the Seante and Smith in the Asem- bly called the atention of the major- lity. inadare:te It before It was passed, In effect 1t would seam that the Logis. | ature contemplates paying not onty for its own printing, but the print- ing bill of the next The next Legisiature, however, will pay own printing bill, 80, here is the tidy mum of $300,000 standing appropriated for something already paid for, or to be pald for | trom another Of course the men who put $300,000 in the Appropriation Bill Intend that !t shall Legislature. source. that be spent. Seldom has money ever been turned back to the State, The public nnd the Governor are J tifled In assuming that this double ap- propriation ts a dodge to get hold of $200,000 for some purpose not die- cloned, Whit- should #ee that the taxpayers ure relieved of the $200,000 burden, of which $210,000 will be eaddied on | the taxpayers of New York City if the bill goes through, For thts reason Gov man In these two items alone the Gov. | ernor the pec Why @ direst tant can save pie $670,000, Legisiature ts lavish in feeding | | Miss Susanna Cocroft 1. The dt mw wv V. Cultivation of How to Bit, Stand Health, Character acter and beauty. “Woman spends table or. heslery for her husband. tystem of husband and children. Two | spent an hour in discussing whether) the “But advanced thought to-day “Men have more sense of art in the buman form than women,” she de- \olared. “They have not the time to Spend in art galleries brought into) their homes, and whtle they toil, that wife, cister or mother may have 1618-! “one of the most prolific sources of uro to study and to bearttty the home, domestic unhappiness iid divorce ts she should not forget to express the) the f1)-health—of women. It Iw a beauty within herself. “A man Ilkes to be proud of the woman who means the most to him, be she wife, mother, sister or aweet- we Tt heart, He turns to look at a beautl-| trong ful, gracefully carried figure, while he! “Figh apiritual and mental qual asses by without a glance hundreds’ ties may hold the unusual man, the of women who are out of proportion| ide and dreamer: |. these alone and who carry themacives careless! 1! not hold the every-day man of and indifferent. mediocrity, Beauty of smil is not “Do not impute to that man a WTONK) enough, Strong physical attractions motive; his artistic sense ts aroused: | must be added; sound health and (nm ts very soul awakens; he ween the! vinrant lite force expression of his Innate love for the! “A wite does not expect to hold beautiful in form and movement, “Pity the man who is eo dead that he is not moved by @ beauti- ful statue or a beautiful picture. Pity him more if he ie not moved | when th beautiful outlines are expr in living, breathing | fleeh, with the added attraction of warmth, color and movement. The man who does not appreciate ® beautiful woman hae had hie | artistic nature dwarfed or crushed, He hae lost the very quality upon | which your strongest influence depends. 1 must confess T do not think many inen noed the pity which Miss Coeroft | hy la ready to give them, But I agree | he this y of the woman who thinks ahe te | either too good or too clever to bother | of their parent#—proud of the! about being as beautiful as Nature rlage, thelr bearing and general up- * eae | pera sions Baa & women aud wo bad ves ens ulabed “Women say they have and figure,” she repeated to me with mingled amaze any sajjow? ment and tndignation. women would be strong, mentally and spiritually, they must keep the physical body strong that it may tramme! their growth. The body should be expreesion of a beautiful soul. provement, attain to greater mental poise and clearnneas, if we WILL, BEAUTY OF WOMAN'S SOUL NOT woman's privilege and duty to oon- body, cr neglect to keep it well aod important of one's children as well the Mother Holds Attestions of the Child. This is the last of a sertes of articles given to The Evening Wortt by The titles of the articles follow Beavty Is a Duty How to Have a Good Figure. Cure of the Skin and Hair. and Walk | ARTICLE V. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “Nor soul helps fleah more now than flesh helps soul.” It is one of the most perfect lines Robert Browning ever wrote which Mins Susanna Cocroft cites to show the lation, the inevitable interdependence, of health, char close interre- no time to care for health “No time? Oh, shame! It not fitting hours embrofdering a doily for her She spends much time putting together various condiments to form pastry and viands which ruin the digestive in‘elligent-looking women recently starched clothes should be washed before the sheets and pillow cases, yet these same women think themselves too buay to attend regularly to exercises for health or figure “One has more patiance with al- ENOUGH FOR AVERAGE MAN, rve her vitality and womanliness 1s sinful for her to abuse her her husband's love and admira- tion just because years ago they were pronounced man and wife. No matter how truly he may love her, unless she gives care to her toilet, her health and her figure, sure at eome time to draw ble contrasts between | ure, satisfaction and | of wholesome attrac: tion, of beauty in woman. the “and don't you think that he retaining the « ns to of one's yhand? “Of course tt is,” 1 sugested agreed Migs © ‘O- | wolaltat tn condemning the! eroft “The ghildren #@ love to be pro. but Sound Health and! and Beauty | | Sue Te | ignore horsetf, “To keep her WAS Foun Dames TO FKERUS BauTiFy HERSELR? WORLD, satuBDaT -'Pertect Woman Builds Up Self. Respect | By Increasing Her Own Physical Beauty Wf this pride? to TIME Can she afford to in the hearts and livos of her children as ee- did the women of old, curely a to hold t ir admiration as well 6 their love, the mother must be aa noat, attractive and weil groomed as the women whom they meet She cannot afford ever to fall below her best or to be care- less in outward appearance. Sho must hold their admiration as well as their wield rorpect, strongest if she would influence. A slouchy, untidy figure may be an refining influences: of itt protect- its beauty Graceful lines and curves of the figure, skin soft, smooth and clear glossy hair, pink, dainty and wel shaped nails, hands soft and white have in themselves as ¢ refining influenc tonal, SeNCE of sound of bea Woman is sloth of centu passively permitting pan educa- as has the beautiful painting er and figure to become whatever the combination of modern living conditons and negligence on her own part may make them, she is learning to work with Nature in making herself the truest and highest expression of beauty.” An America “Would you be a in con this sober war usion Miss Cocroft had ng for the women of perfect wife or ASG FOR Great Demonstrations in Honor | @f Suffrage imdapen- dence Day — MARCH UP STH AVENUE ver and Jewels Into “Mett- ing Pot” Three women stood on the curb in 008 Fifth Avenue thie borage jerdt je mounded nd blared tee came th front of No afternoon, hugging bie nleree in thetrarms A down the avenue and « A long string of autom sight. flying flags and banners and bunting -the colores New York knowe ~ well a emblem of Votes for Women Traffic anve way before the suffrn winte and the a a awune in toward he curb They Mled alowly peat the three women, who held er brane jardinivres outatretehed sinine " was a tinkling and a bie silver ma fork fointe the flest Jardiniere, Then it an to rain gold and atl vor and precious ate Wor today Woman's Indepen jonce Day an the Suffragiste optt mistionliy put “the last before women are enfrancbived hey were on parad n Wifth Avenue and oa ees women with the jardinieres ‘he | OF BR. T. FOR TIME) <=" nded like a shackie cast away JARDINIERES USED AS | Contract Expires and Railroad Com.! THE MELTING POTS. The brase jardinieres were the | pany May Take Over | melting pots Others have beer | Business Itself | yawning all week and receiving the contributions of the masses to swelt patrons of the H.R. 'T were as-| the campaign expenses of the Empire tonixhed to-day to find all sayettialin | Campaign Comimittes, ‘The from the surface and women who held them unttl the comp. = y, all sta ls y were so tired that eager asso- consequent burden to ton posters covered with blank white) ciates had to be pressed into service ok old and wrinkled | paper, all news and candy booths| were Mrs, Carrie Chapman Catt, Why should she? closed and all slot machines sealed.’ Chairman of the committee; Mra. OMicers of the company said that the contract with the Intercity Adver- yee Company expired at midnight last night and had not been renewed | because the company felt that It could make an arrangemwnt vastly mor profitable, It was intimated that the BR itaelf might take over the contract John Blair and Mrs, Charles Farley Winch Worn out silver, things Jewelry, old broken spoons and precious that were neither old nor broken rained Into the melting pot, A great harvest already had boen reaped dur- Ing the week, and up on the twen- udler the Inter-City contrat tne tit! Moor of the butlding nt No. 208 Fifth Avenue, where the Empire &tate BR. T. obtained only $217,000 for the| Campaign Committes haa ite hoad- advertising and vending privileges. civriere, there wan another melting | The Hudson-Manhattan Coj y. | } Th idron-Manhattan Company. | oor qecorated with auffrage colore, doing about one eighth as much buat . ; 1 lute this afternon there were demande cultivation of our physi- | moxt any Jot in life than that of the| dency in defeating a worthy ob- | ness, rocelven $216,000, officers of the Seeapnite cearnaiba (kh pourine cal as well as our mental selv common woman who is contented| Jeet in losing her homage and |B OR. T. sald, and the Interborough re {8 the contributions that had Woman must be trim, vital, dyna: | to stay common,” continued Miss held upon them, nd Metropolitan Companios, with he i ent from eve uarter of the mig, to hold her position of lead- | Cocroft. “I mean the woman who|WHEN WOMAN'S BEAUTY 18 IR-| fewer surface care and about the és mae neti 1 v4 Et aan ership. She cannot disregard her | cares nothing for her appearance or | REVOCABLY LOST. snme number of elevated and RUD ay | eee ene snot and the appearance and hope to be educa: {her Influence upon others. One can| “And the quulities which make for #, recelve $1,075,000 under thelr new Nhe eet Wanda pene 4 peat fall tive, inepiring influence to others; keep her personal charm and her | Success In The business world are the | contracts Leeann der plaawe ei be Catlad | she cannot neglect her physical [good figure, keep herself neat and |sime asx those which are most belp-) MJ. Cohn, President of the Inter. | Swell noite pisces e melted self, her health, without suffering | attractive, no matter what her en- | ful in the bome hat woman's finer! eity Company, refused to make any 1 | a loss of self-respect.” vironment Jsensibilities are of necessity dulled | jtatement regarding the change. | ie pained ph BOnSS. seneeibied And then Mis Cocroft put forward] “Every day an incroasing number throu! intlmate businens amsoclation | Col, T, 8, Williams President of the De eee? Groen make A perfectiy good alibi for the tired) of people are learning the truth that Ne eee ee te Bi vsiglt oat ately HRT. Issued a statement in which |oxhorting the workers to gather in business man who may be accused of] physical fmperfection ts more fault) |retined-—in short, coutseged—by such he sald the Inter-City concern waa! gold and atlver and, what she said ‘tetting his eyes stray after strange! than misfortu th:* we can mould | association, is the utmost casutstry. | dominated by Ward & Gow, the con- betes! mad Bi oh amd sym- atic aathy : A womin's beanty lost akin i pathizera fo goddesses, the plastic clay to perfectly artiatte | Se lea ie alien the uenee j raetors for advertining on the Inger- |”nere was an automodjle for each WHY A MAN TURNS AROUND TO) Proportions, that we can acquire fie figure destroyed, hae {boraugh, subway and elevated ines, {of the thirty Assembly Districts In oman gracefulneas and rhythm of move- thin » valuable | and had refused to exereiné the peivi- tan and 1fOany more private KAT AW . phyeic: despolled by careless: | se ol . Be together w' a bus, t Loo ment, and, with thjs physical im SLR LAL ie Ween? toe ee of renewal of itn contract for | Charming femininity. five years except at the terma named |in the old contract, Because of the| Inter-City company's notioe to the ’ublic Bervice Commiasion that it |nad an option of renewal, the HB, R. | T. was unable to obtain bide for a) new contrast. —— special auto for each of th tees formed to work among the voters lof non-American origin OFFICIAL BOUNDS CALL POR THE MARGH, ‘Mine Rose Gandermen, effetal bugier of the Suffragiata, led the pa 34th Street VOTES Stup on the Way to Cast S&- ee | Rush Parke | James McCreary & Co. yi euebt bani FLYING SQUADRON CARRIGC THE NEWS TO THE CLUBO. There was a fying squadron whieh potittes! carried the word to every there were indoor ' and the Nurses in@s for | a remeo in the dest Aint A night the autre. «i will wi rn 1p With more meetings, Tad Mra Winch will invade the bam. room the Harlem Demooratie Chub at « West Kad Hall in One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street to man's inde Queens, Kichmond and t the gay auto pameants; ad Grery Aan enmity Dy saw meetings al heard the Women atump apeakore talk sloauentiy of votes for women, Kverywhe thousand# of names of torn were seathored and) promises dlicited to vote for the Thin was the last ndenee Day * “rows for soon women will be free This was just a gay sort of oolebr ation to-day of the tremendous progress of t |The bie event, the speakers sald, would be the Woman's Declaration of | Tndependence, which will be read amid imposing celebrations on the Fourt! July antiliiecamiins DETECTIVES SEE ATTACK, ‘Takin | Watching suspected enfe burgiare on the Bowery at Hester Street before a , Detectives Downing, Bir- Ingham and MoManus stopped Edward Freeman of the Mills Hotel in Seventh Avenue and George Poppodolus of Ne. 28 Allen Street ane we cn ae into the bundles ¢ ‘Two women's fine evening corns and a man's evening sult were disel The men were arrest | ‘The detectives had started for Mea@- quarters with thelr prisoners when three men Al Roundiaky of No. Main Hartford, and knock him down. ran away an Birmingham and ling, dashed for them. Soundial ] Ha, een ed, Louis Laven ef teen | Oliver Street, and said the other [had taken $40 and bie geld Lerna seemed nearly erased os [i |entne ———iineeesee JOEL DIDN'T WED HER. And fon even ¥ enay-forgetting Bohemia—there can be | auch « thing as a broken heart ang a blighted romance waa revealed to-day | Plgce at dock, Gisponner of o % rod her ae i ¥ Wy REO ine hi | rt a tittwyer, at No. 116 Broadway. WASHINGTON, May 1.—To create . eter ta reserve for the navy, when Millie Gardner, a pretty brunette aingor, oro mate in the Rinaldo. pronttetar ot Pe Weat Fort; ret Street. on and bi imal of having [promised to March 1 last year, but didn't her ——— | Fer Navy Petroleum Reserve, ‘. in “Natrons ror ’ Seanty: 5th Avenue mother, a perfect business or profes- sional Woman, a perfect sister or naugurateen Monday daughter, know that you must. frst wat » May Sed, the make of yourself erfect woman. of to-day glorifies the himent of mind by exemplt herself" GAS KILLS TWO | BROTHERS. st dy, She makes cif becuuse she knows: ANNUAL SALE OF MEN'S WEAR This important event offers the mest remarkable values of the year in + Finds Them Aaphy tn Men's High Grade Furnishinge, at unprecedented prices. Room Where They Stept, ! Olen Smith, clghteen-yenra-old of No Van tins ITinded. nnd. Twenty Ineluding Straw Hats, Tennis Trousers, Rain or Top Dratiors, Pathe, axed Shleteeny and Wt Coats, Auto Dusters, Neckwear, ‘‘McCreery Shirts,”’ sh ies aI a Pajamas, Night Shirts, Beach and Bath Robes, Silk fn" iy For Details See Sunday's Newspa, Gloves, Underwear, Half Hose and Sweater Coats. pers | | a lc

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