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¢ TMHorid. MeTARLASIOD BT four © ed ; ay wale TAT? Yre ‘ e an ane Toe outa) The Sheatar World Daily Mag r of Rest & PY GLAD % ‘ Ported ' The reat Albany have te . fing confueion Piwe t eer Kvening Dres that anylody can undereta A $670,000 extra appr * ») canals wher eure ho estra the allowance for print or fed f s 1 ® TH BO eXpianats 16 at i] r Remember, 70 per cent t te t fexpayers of thu city en e F the Govern ands, subject to tus « " Already New York City taxpayers cave ar ‘ @ week from to-day to protest againet $ om by the Logislat . Why let of this raid wax! Wh @pnounce now that it will Hot be permifte — te A NEW USE FOR IT. WIFE,in Oregon feared her husband was being stolen fre her. So she petitioned a court to enjoin the alleged “female adventuress” in the case from continuing to love him In denying the injunction the judge observed T gave a re If @training order in this cuse asking help.” Very likely. But who could blame the come to be a fascinating legal device for men in their individual and corporate business tangles, For the hard-pressed it is quick, effective and gaine time to turn around. Who can wonder that it has im Pressed itself upon the femi®ine mind asa promising cure for iunpend ing dom¥stic disruption? Men manage to persuade courte to grant injun Parposes on queer grounds. ve women Would be nu? ‘The infunction haa ione for Why shouldn't women have a try? =t- : THE LAST OBSTACLE. HE taxicab ordinance which thé efforts of The Evening World put upon the city’s hooks is now—after withstanding all at = tempts of the Taxi Trust to erase or modify it—finally and definitely affirmed by the Appellate Division of the 8 ipreme Court. The Commissioner of Licenses has immediately issued notice that every taxicab found operating in the public streets without a license wilt be seized and the driver arrested. Privileges for special taxicab companies at steamship piers will no longer be permitted. ‘The city | will recognize but one kind of taxicab—the licensed taxicab The Taxicab Trust, which inherited the policies of the Yellow Taxicab Company, is now utterly routed It was time. Although kept in garages and vacant Jota, subject te call by telephone, claimed | te offer superior service, unlicensed cubs operated by the trust have | been allowed to deteriorate until instead of being “superior” they are) the moet rickety, nncomfortable and out of date cabs in the city New York now has its whole taxicab service firmly in hand. can insist upon uniformity, high standards and improvement Commissioner of Licenses says: “By the time the License Department | has done all that the ordinance requires it to do the taxicab ayetem of New York will be a model for the rest of the world.” ; When The Evening World fought its winning fight the extortionate, graft-ridden, hit-or-niss taxicab service that so long) a ‘dingraced New York, it prophesicd a day when taxicabs would he. m jo to abolish! ed “Familiar Quotation: Tr | was boundless | Aa the | iMluences whore the eninged Gladva was visit ine doiphta | as they phrased tt. N\i\= i \ LN STA, SusT A MinuTe, } Biuvy, -1 rave ’ ONLY To PAINT THe ( DINING Room Foor ~ 7c The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Goyyright, 1016, by ‘Phe Pree Pubilabing Co, (The New York Breuing Wertd) PS a sinall world after as| been telling Jake all spring that he cH juatiy [OUENE to Kuh At out of there, but he's wo darned lary that he don’t do famous and constantly consult nothing he's told to do. He t@ the |rother-tn-law of my partner, and Ro Qtadva ou know how retations is? ant’ to ATF. Jack Sliver, (he tarra’| “ELL Just put your box of roses here jand be back in a minute with atring lor frend. | ing paper to wrap it up for you," At least Its sweet |watd the orist. “That's Jake calling, radinted Harlem, |] suppose he wante me toneome and ht his cigarette for him!" “Gladys deserves tt," was hor Inward Hartiett saya in his ‘| Cackloberry'’s engar noe again wealthy bach from Mtw. Phite Jarr, to faraway wrees: — ndsy. — au HELLO BULLY, \ aoa | (peLLo Mecuot NE AmMUTE Soot im Just CURLING | | Ss fF 1Do Ss HAIR AF TOR i Kate ) ua THE Co ) PuTul S ANS STRING SOME BEANS Trouble Is Headed for the Jarrs; It Is Coming thought. “She cheated, and eo did Mrs. Jarr! I know they cheated.” Just how she knew they cheated she did not explain to heraelf, but donning the heavy leather gloves the florist had dropped in the wheelbarrow, and picking up the pruning shears, Miss Irene Cackleberry had soon garnered some half a dozen sprays of the Luore- ta Borgia variety of a rockery. With her gloved bands she placed them among the roses in the box. Their rich and glossy green leaves looked beautiful among the tender whites and pinks of the roses. ‘Then the florist returned and wrapped where her unengaped rene Was “staying home with Mawr,” The Wee So, It being a small world, after M, behold Miss Lrone Cackleberry in *hiladelphia travelling on a trolley ear | Copyright, 1018, by ‘The Press Publish! By Martin Green k’s Wash ng Co. ("The New York Brening World) RIGHT WITH You) rh WANTS ME To ( a OMELE IN THE PANTRY (WON'T DISTURB You 0 YOUR, DAY oF REST, Ton! HULL CALL SOME DAY WHEN You ARE WORKING to Them by Express, up the box of roses without knowing they had been augmented with the y_with tt. = Warologues ~ By Alma Woodward The studio af magasine war corre ne avoglent he war aden! Jaman Satay vowel ksctiad arind tle Yorebend fer St “Mo mouht attacking te hare of ° ac ‘ Evowriter that ie" In’ the last etaem €, dlainte: Aton. Hie wile, any ‘Ales Madama Mutterfly.” stande patsat on one faut realy to fy wt his epseniodic omaanda,) E (thinking aloud)—"Knee-deep H tn water, the cold slime cor- roding the very marrow of our bone"—— She (timidly)—Dear I don't think marrow oan corrode. It's soft, Only ivy, And Mise Cackleberry tripped | WOMEN AS TAXPAYERS. Vy Sophle irene Loeb, ter " repre ent . t « legae ature juet ghia B10y direct ta A Where a ' e ‘ ' protest thee wasteful g th ‘ One of the ert une of thes corn en 4 , { unde 1 { figures? ' : time t . " nes (hae Why not x the forey ! git for a ve a bill that will demand of thom money? Money for needles \\ jobe, mey for y sup atumpein ponds to make } r fie ng, money for instructors 9 sel e that have not yet been built, and many other ne om iter Phe Anti that woman's place for ecor in the usehold. 1 show ber interest in the spe goof publie purse, os well u ry ind widows’ pensions Tt is a good chance : - at wi Ten Peace Treaties That Ended Great Wars} |} " ? By Albert Payson Terhune. . ; Gopynght 118. by The Pree Poldieking fo The New Yort Brening World) No.4 -TREATY OF PARIS, Establishing Our Freedom, - HIS ts the story of the Peace Treaty that closed the Revolutionary War and established our freedom When Cornwallis surrende at Yorktown, England's last hope of conquering ber rebeliious American colonies was gone. The war w really at an end, though tt Was not vet admitted by Great Britain that we were free. At list commissioners were chosen by both hations to meet in Paris to settle peace terms This negoviating terms was no simple task, for France and Spain both wanted a hand {n the affalr, exch working for her own Interests, Also Great Britain was sending to the conference some of her wiliest statesmen, To offset all this, the United States was forced to rely on a committes of five Americans whose only statesmanahip bad been learned in the rough school of revolutionary experience. They were Franklin, Jay, Laurens, Adame Jefferson France had been our friend in the revolution Rot shrewd ol4 Franklin suspected that she would favor her ally, Spain, rather than the United States in the matter of Axing our boundary lines and our fisheries rights. Congress, too, had hampered advice. commisMoners with masses of windy Instruction and Franklin and his colleagues decided on a bold course, which, in cas ef failure, might have gotten them in serious trouble. Hriefly, thelr plan was to go etraight ahead with the negotiations, without consult- ing France's wishes, and to disregard orders given ry A Daring Move in Diplomacy. ene them by Congress. This they did, And success crowned ‘heir plucky action. tt took all Pranklin‘s skill, however, to ward off a clash with France, because of the commissioners’ disregard of France's wishes. The boundaries queation was the first and toughest problem in drawing up the Treaty of Paris, Great Britain seemed inclined to think that the Allegheny Mountains should form the westernmost limit of the United States. Franklin held out for the Mississ'pp! River as our western boundary. And ta time, through sheer perserverance and genius, he carried the day. After that the reat of the task was nore or lese easy, although the American commissioners were forced to fight hotly over one or two points ‘The treaty iteelf wae « triumph for five Yankees (at whose “home-made | diplomacy” the rest of the world had been sneering) over the foremost diple~ | magot Europe. | he treaty, at last, in Beptember, 1783, was whipped into the following e@hape: Spirat and foremost, Great Britain acknowledged the absolute independ- ence of each and all of her former American colonies, the thirteen States of | the new Union, Second, the boundartes of the United States was to run, roughly, north | and south, from Canada to Florida, and eas, and west from the Atlantic to the Missisaippt River (as far south as the Sist parallel). This left the north- east and northwest corners so indefinitely divided that troubie followed later tn both regions ‘Third, both Great Hritain and the United States were to have free navi- gation of the Missisaipp! River, and our country waa to have all ite colontal | Nehertes rights restored. Fourth, creditors of both nations were nuthorized to collect old debte held lin abeyance by the war, and Congress Was to be asked to pase relief acte for the benefit of An © had suffered through Sen) their loyalty to Bl A Georet Cla Then there was a separate and secret clause of | In Treaty. agreement that if England shduld at any time win | * Florida back from Spain, the southern boundaries of the United States were to be extended in accordance with the change im ownership. | hard things corrode, like iron and-—— ‘Theae, in brief, were the terms of the treaty that freed us from the y J » servic! to the outakirts to purchase flowers 9 | Me (eharpiy)—Look up “necrogie."| mother country and put an official end to the Revolutionary War-—better regulated by the city government for the service of the ‘public, in leor her engaged sinter in Harlem, ro- | 66 ID you note,” asked the head] his search to Chicago. If the Anyway, people reading the article terms than many Amertcans had dared to hope for; better terms than could epected by the city government for the safety of the public, encour-| gardieas of expense so long as ane | polisher, “that Dr. Gold- OF Wie Aaalniateatlon is that $7,500 a will become so excited c; Won't DO- pogeibly have been gained but for the courage and the wit of the five mem } , = 5 > yea ‘8 pay, why not go e tee 4 ® . aged by the city government for the comfort of the publie, \could pugehass the flowers “at the water, President af the! biicr community where the Prnsident| ‘She (renditngreNecroais; mortif. | WO Fepresented our country at the Treaty of Parle Ry This propheey under the ordinance is rapidly be ) mye | source.” as one's income tax achedule| Roard of Health, who Is to retire has|of the First National Bank drags | ! ’ apidly being realized. The |v ouia atate kona to Chicago to pick his suc-[down $75 a week? In such @ place| He (triumphantly)—Ha! Don't tn-| pe Tatest decision of the court takes away the last obstacle, | = inhia, |cenmor?”” Dr. Goldwater should be able to find|terrupt again, little one. You spotl| __ ee aie | On the outekirts of Philadelphia, |censor! i ) pr. Gold. |M&ny men who would cheerfully con-| the crashing atmosphere I build e ec 10Nns re) tienen —————— | where tt is muoh quieter than in Phil 1 can’t understand why Dr. a rep sont to take $7,500 a year to live in| around myself. (Continuing to com- i rs so {t {# thought, Miss Irene} Water went to Chicago,” repited the|New York and be President of the| pose.) “A man, who a moment before Hits From Sharp W its ad no trouble in maoing| laundry uit, “Chicago is a large|Health Board. Dr. Goldwater should | had gripped my cold fingers tn his e ‘The ' r Hed to thi nhouses whereat to buy|town- almost halt as big ae Now | PAicon eee Blcae the Haas polrasen oe 11a Ae say tent ails ac e or ir more ingenuity is applied to the misus for his wif aud day if ‘ : , . mo, Kalamasoo and! lent sound aud fell at my ! Hi making of excuses, the poorer their | ledo Blade 2 OAD AARERAE EO | oe to aand har 4 sister, at York. It has been the policy of thelOsnkosh Rallroed: | passed!” eat quality ts likely to be. e ee \thelr mother's au ag a poace | Cacrent Administration to go for com- 8 em) | (norrified)—"A silent sound” — , Athces who are prompt in the Keep: | for ait” oftinn, {® otten fespanatbe | ofroring werent officials to mek towne Uke] Why? Alea, Why Not? $1 aaaperated)—ttave you no By Helen Rov Jand ing of appointments have a great deal Inquirer is aon Mins Irene @ackleborry Inqul Gar Ind hich is only a few OEE LIEDER: | sense of the artistic How did you of waiung to do.-Albany Journal. . | price of ros tthe source.” She dears old and largely populated by] ¢¢@ HAT do you think of the! come to be my mate dear? Ax . re Fie Brea (tiling Gai CUA ew Nook Govealie Gand 8 that the fianing | ene . Ce s who ore completely or par trustess of > sound is awesome you have to im neat, 1B, ty The Press Tablieh! ‘3 ea esi) " Whe man Who deste’ 90 oul uauatty | is or ths the (sing | wap told the price poraons wi pletely OF Pe yateee (26) ENG COA Gt) SUT ie OF couree—And 3 far as being on time for a dinner engagement is concerned, most can live on his income.—Nashville | time see AT aren't they ¥! ur, for this time y unhunilior with the English Ossining trying to stop) atiteration ts good. Now py are about as reliable as # lady's wrist wate, Banner. | oe of year?” asked Miss reno Cackle. #HkuaKe. Doubdess the train Dr.| baseball games in Thomas Mott Os-| ['ve used the word “shrill” four times | Men are ahout as rele ‘ \. ‘A man who flattera himself that he} Wonder who first put it into the) jopry was on dida't stop at|borne’s college?” asked the head| in six pundred Spr hee me 8 4 ‘i has no enemies doesn't really know | head of a barber that he ought to ; olisher. synonym. uekly! y thought is Some Women are born with on understanding of men, some acquire f his so-called frien tertain the man 1 ne chal Are they for a funeral?" asked the . be . | ate some of his Pair bile da, jennereenn S20 f aS be bar with Peon hol says that Dr. Gold-|] recall,” said the kuundry man, fone (nervously) —"Shrill: acute, and some just shut their eyes and live happily with their husbands, . ee | o Mihany, Journal, lon ; Oe dicago ae pone “that when the Sing Sing Coavicte—| shirn, high-toned, high-pitched, oes When & man begins to blow hie| A spring tonic, in the minds of some tf {Ny were: ae gen leg ea Fok Nene warn, aay were convicts in those daye-| jiarcing.” So instinctive ts woman's primeval longing to be “owned” that the horn soon as he happens to set fellows, | creased consumption prices?” snappe 88 \ 9 fork | rose against authority ,and started tdty)—-Ab! Pleretng! That's ‘ ’ ts 4 PB R rithels . to the top, he is Nkele te lose hin er toe tur they un eos ‘drinking wll “ is KasA $7,500) tires and bowled and Kept part of iene Qo Mhere fe chat lint of modern girl eloats over a man’s first criticism of her hate or her hatr e - ‘ ; "ie . + o ee ustees of (ue the back 06? that menu. pusband first beat her wt ed her off to his cave , . rant talr ¢ ec, but when |#aliry. ‘The Mayor and some other! Vitae didn't utter a peep | ; the back of , in if ‘ é ere tu crwate| He who 18 bie own servant has a fal cust agesle; Sut Wen | a ihinietration appear] YHRKS dian't utter a peep, aotion| DOW? You remember the walter kay a ; enient master.-Deseret News: people came personally to buy i we# CG think that 47,000 Im pay for & DIKE | jn aw to keep come of Yon, Goes cm fo.vau she mins eae tt at When one woman speaks of another as a “nice, sweet little thing” she — —————-—--—— | to era ney weren't so particu. tractive only sone! y borne’s| brus d kartoffel s ene ‘ | for funerals they w Particls and attractive only to boneheads. | |hoys from playing ball on Sunday| ine gate tom tn hor teat Pilkerey German.) |i8 merely softening the statement that she considers her an elghteen-carat lar to get fresh ones, as their rapid | “Pucusands and thousands of bual-|gternoons and others of the busy! 5 ot . v wilting would be ascribed to the prox: |noss and proicssional ’aen, engaged 1D trom: rooting. ‘There are not many |), Ue (UXIDE). “Generel Von Binder. | fool. ore intricate: than urg mutte! | | pe imity of so many other flowers at the th of trained experts | 20Uses in Ossining within view of the (i). corporal crumpled!" ‘ow the . . > . Bs 0) niy thing that makes a man more indignant tha v" ataoauline aa cubes canting prison and the nearest is several city! ft acer of Paria, dear, It’s over| The o} rd e indig: in to have a woman > “Hate Of to Burroughs!” us sources To the Edie of The Krening World fien long Hats off to Burroughs for “The) sn inoue | Mucker,” recently publisned in your| Pbk a “Complete Novel Eacti Week"! But,| give me definite information concern readers, don't you think it is @ little! ing the malter? This should ereast hard on us to give us tory like | many girls, rd that at this time of the year and not Jet the chap get the girl he loves? ropehs. What Interest? | % the Kalo of The Brening World: I borrowed $100; paid the 6 per) joent. interest in advance, and am), paying $2 4 wook on the principal! from date of joan, My father and ! wot talk. about this, and 1 told him that ” paying more than 6 per cent. if 1! came to actual ures, How much interest am 1 pay | readera? FRANK 3. Let's have 4 seque!, Mr, baa '4 Librarian's Chances To the PAitor of The Brening Word My daughter is abou! to o her course in the clemen school, and for some iime we had considered | allowing her to take a librarian’s egares (2 one of the schools. “On, do you sell flowers cheaper If ‘ i . tic in French, they are not fresh?” asked Miss Cack r thomselves lucky.| niiyed on the s abbath. The] something caustic in Bren A athiry of your 4s pretty clase Pridtuog of Chsciiiing ahoah witch aol isile Iooks for aoniething cauets ) Derry: to $ w jay and I venture | wresented w A nice, gloomy stec) SHO (pitifully) tt tells you only "1 can give you some that's blown to say that a majority of the workers |Eiraving of Cotton Mathers’ {about bread and butter and tps and pretty badly bo said, “and IM tet ¢ s oly earn less (hap $25 a] I PETES BA PAA things. aymah _ © them pretty cheap They'll Working week | He (inspired) Ah! "“Chameau!" you have th ny preny ¢ 4 4 higded Jebeal ety beater Ia not per-| & Retroactive Repentance. § That's It. if you call a Frenchman| do if they're for ® relative and are! sonaily acquit with the doctors | anaaaeneenaanananaes) la "chameau” he'll strangle you with | going any distance and laymen on his staff. It seems to| ¢g ys "said the head polisher, an escargot! (Reading from MB8B.) In fact, the florist guve Miss Cackle- {mo that several of them are fully ] “that bundreds of mushy) Geo: Vidal hissed ‘Chamequ!’ be berry quite a mess of well-opeurd equipped for the office of President | tween his clenched teeth and”—— the Hoard of Health. They hav roses for two dollars, It made a very large box tudeed, and then he took dis be your in New York hn connected with the department j blocks away, The sole objection ¢ |the prison ball games ts t ° hat they are people are sending letters and telegrams asking clemency for White,| magazine the readers gasped: ©) there under the ash receiver, | want | express her opinion of him when she has caught him doing something foole (And when {t was published tn ine “tt ish is to have her smile and keep {t to herself “love takes wings” at the When dof the honeymoon, dearte, tt is always the wife's winks--and he takes ler halo along with them and pute ‘la pair of horns in its place, Don't strain your eyes trying to read your husband's mind before dine -| ner; wait until he has had his cocktail and you will find the Ngbt much clearer and the print much larger. When you meet a man who nt e smo! swear or fllrt you have tg \ for year hoir part in|the gentleman bandit, who pleaded gives you such a vivid picture of it Aaa Pe ; 4 fair customer around the place tc roused health-|qullty in Brooklyn after a night of|aiit You. can. positively feel the admire him, but you don't have to MARRY him until you have discovere@ show her the hardy annuals f the They Know the| prayer.” Gankness of the trenches and hear what worse habit he has in place of these nace snot thalverine puidser maid ! Doubtless that 1 vushy folk," sald the laundry) the bursting shells and sea the ned-t seats Raone ere be Ream Ole s what is the tte ith th “overlook the fact that W | black gh in the heavens! These, ] yoma side er husband spotle “Don't toueh that,” ho suddenly yoy gra too practicas ) [didn’t begin to pray” unUl the cage| mens Ko. through horrible dangers. to| |.) \vnen a woman conan Hat hushatd spotless it is merely @ sign the warned her, “It's polsoy ivy! I've| “Dr, Goldwater sbould not confine against bim was cinched,” | get thelr material, don't they she has not‘yet turned the spotlight of suspicion on him, = Se —_ 4 é ‘ aaa % Poet te fs ° socaressee TB oes a. a tesenamene aoc scnstnernes memantine nee ——