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Ay Wlorlo. oe) . won —s oe - - - MORE WORK FOR MEDIATOR ¥ DISA NYEMES York | hreatened « resp tan by out, Mayor Mitchel and Charmer ‘ Mission succeeded in faung it & Work Ago leet Monday During the negotiations of that de found the chief obstacle in the obstinacy of certain director « New York Railways Company, who profewed to at the union leaders’ premature claims of vietory Thanks im large measure to the pressure Of public opinion this obstinacy was overcome Does it think Pressure has vince #0 far relaxed a The sig agreement under ' returned to work provided that union and nor nh en eos be treated withamt prejudice ‘The ent I" t ts ready to recognize the company > obligation to prove t t ip to this agreement. 1 attitude Mrs t ve that he bas learned the unwied pr F | rights But what about General Manager It \ mM Diree tore August Belmont, Kdward J, Berw ‘ Have t ettled back into a stubborness that defies all ¢ -t- CTS THE WHICH PROTE PUBLIC? HE Safety Firet Society insur approving the policy of Magistrate Frederick B. House, who believes that the way to cheek automobile slaughter is to send reckless jail. | That is one kind of Magis the! only one. County Judge Mav of Brooklyn heard the case of Frank Rossano, who pleaded guilty to assault in the second degree in having run down and killed E. M. Wilford, an employee of The World, July 4 last, while driving an automobile, it was alleged, on the wrong side of the street. Rossano was indicted for manslauglter. Under the law he could have been sentenced to five years in Sing Sing and fined $1,000, When the case came up last Monday Judge May suspended sentence and Rossano went free. How are we to curb the alarming increase of criminal carcless ness in the handling of motor vehicles if courts take this attitude, toward the guilty? a stat rivers rate, Unfortunately it is not — GET AT THE TRUTH. EARS that the price of bread will presently be raised in this city ae well as in other sections of the country continue to gather, Chicago wheat speculators are using every hint of unfavorable crop bulletins as a pretext for reckless boosting of wheat prices. Market quotations constantly on the jump keep the wholesale bakers in a state of nervous uncertainty as to whether or not the moment has come to protect themselves by advancing prices. Flour in this city has gone up $2 a barrel in the last month, while other ingredient of bread, including milk and sugar, are also increasing in cost, The consumer is thus threatened with another serious addition to the burdens of his daily budget. Isn't it about time to inquire with what actual justification? The Federal ‘Trade Cominission recently investigated the methods of the big oil producers and already the » of gasoline is descend- ing from the exorbitant heights to which it had been pushed, W note that a Congressman from Kansas has just filed a complaint with the same commission charging the big meat-packing companies with violating the anti-trust laws and demanding an inquiry. Why doesn’t the Federal ‘I'rade Commission hasten to investigate for the benefit of American householders the deeply important ques- tion of the cost of bread? Let’s find out the whole truth about the causes of present move- ments, actual and threatened, in the prices of wheat, flour and loaf, How much is prevision of diminished crops lation? How much conspiracy ‘ Hits From Sharp Wits “Kat an onion and go to bed,” some Xpect a_loaf to coe body advises; but whether friend or | delphia Telegraph. , enemy we do not know.—Toledo oe How much speeu- Phila-| The annual question of what to a with a boy who ts too young to Ket a Job and too proud to work about the house is again upon us,—Indianapolis News see nity je in ue born, We've noticed oft, alas’ The carpet always is most worn Before the looking, glass . How many of us would cast a man who pays she goes can crumb upon the waters if we didn't *come backs ———_ 2 ne me Such Is Life! HANTS / PHONED Yer 2 —_S WE HAVEN'T BEEN Gone Two MINUTES oes > ummer Outings At Small Cost ~~: Week-End Trips. W YORK ts within easy reach of many interesting places ana even If you can only get away (over a Saturday or Sunday it is pos- sible to seo quite @ little of the world before work begins again on Monday morning You can take a delightful water trip to the most famous si mmer resort in the country and be away for two nights without having to pay hotel bills by leaving the city at 5.30 on Saturday afternoon on board the boat for New- port, KR. 1 Tickets to Newport and Vall River are exactly the same price, but as the steamer reaches Newport at half-past two in the morning it is best to remain comfortably ta your} stateroom until the boat docks at Fatt River, breakfast on board and then | take the spectal car that leaves the wharf at 8.30 for ghe accommodation of the Newport passengers. The trip from Pall River to Newport is very short and you will have a long summer day in the beautiful old city, Here are the summer homes of the Vanderbilts, Astors and other millionaire: who are Prominent socially, You can get a much better view of these houses than is usually the case in such places, for | | JUST ONE MINUTE AND A HALF * Copyright, 1016, by The Hreae Publishi By Sophie Irene Loeb {F Massachusetts Soclety for the T Prevention of Cruelty to Ani- mals has sent out this notice: “To the Lady of the House: Please order all your supplies for the day in one order early in the morning. One daily trip to your door—should it not be enough? Two trips wear me out twice as fast. Telephoning in an extra order doubles the work for the sales clerk and bookkeeper as well as for the driver and horse, This adds to the cost of all you buy. “Hurry-up orders mean the whip for me. “Please think of those who serve you, both people and horses, “Your obedient servant, “The Delivery Horse, It ts certainly @ wise injunction for the New York housekeeper, especially the woman who substitutes the tele- phone for the market basket. There is something to be said not only about the totlsome delivery horse but the clerks, e Of course, the storekeeper, in order to retain his customers, will cater to the housekeeper regardiess of her thoughtlessne: He will send the delivery horse or boy around they are in plain sight from the street on one side, while through the rear of the private grounds runs the famou Clift Walk, along which the public is permitted to stroll, You can ride | all about the place quite inexpensively, | bathe in the ocean, go out to the fort, | any tme she orders anything from & box of matches to a long list of produce, It isn't he who suffers as a consequence, but rather his em- ployees. 1 know a young woman cashier in a’ grocery store who answers the elephone and takes orders aa well who actually became @ human wreck he Housekeeper and the Delivery Hors ~ ws sa) ) Prone i Vr > PHONED WHILE Nou WERE OUT a 3 >) pe Co, (The New York Evening World.) , and the pathetic part about it is that j¢ach woman seems to think that she is the only customer that is to be served, | "It is the rare woman who makes allowances or thinks about the clerks who are there for the sole purpose of | pleasing her and the workers who are so often overburdened because of her \ inconsiderateness, |, “If only each woman would give | little bit of thought to those who mus: work in order to fulfil her wants, things would be so much more pleasant and certainly less sordid for all of us.” here is considerable wisdom in this. I regret to say there are many house: | Keepers who go om the theory that be- jgause they pay for @ thing every at- {tention should be given them, re jless of how much Inconveni | causes others. it just needs a iittle Golden Rule to save sulering in this case, as it does in |all others—if each housewife would | ‘but stop and consider. j For example, she could certain by making @ comp: everything wanted before phones for her day's order. take but 4 moment or two. Instead of | this, she goes to te phone and at random gives an order, since she rea- | jsons it is so easy to ring up the |gwrocery man again tf she has for- | gotten a thing. |” And many @ time that thing she |has forgotten might have waited un jul the next day, She usually goes on| |the theory that the horse is Just in, | front of the grocery store waiting for | her summons—and the clerks tov. — | Of course they are paid to do it, but | the overwork such thoughtless house- | keepers cause cannot be estimated. I hope to see the day when the de- | livery horse will be relegated to the farm, where he will be used with dis- | cretion and where his tasks will be bit of considerable the asily be plist of she It would | The Evening World Daily Magazine. Thursday: Augus By Maurice Ketten t 17; 1916 '* S vings of Mrs. Ky Helen Rowland VOT 9€T 2. ge ‘ a te a te ee He Again ( TON, « be Merrie’ Mee Mow eastiy bow iN AN HOUr | bs we ve LETS HURRY | WANT To BE , BACK IN A MINUTE ) abelle Mae Fll Doolittle you'll leave a far | that way," eat By Bide Dudley “Come, now!" Mr. Jarr 1Btery net a Jarr. “IE thought you might be prright, 1916, by The Prews | ug Co, |“Johnson is all right, 4 assure hopp out with The New York Rvening Word that you are mistaken about him.| friends and wouldn't mind if 2 wae dil ziveland Let Ee st ‘And when L spoke about seeing if the | W ith the bavat e ‘omen's jettermen . te sant that we lat friends hay, <\boat was safe, I only mean ial nds have I to ai League of Saint bale & dances going to test it If it were safe had ro with?” asked Mra, eat aay eet nay beget Wee Ped in case of a storm, You won't mind have ride up all friends and all please and it was indee easal a aden \Ures that other women Sixty-two couples attended, although |" FIP, eoiared Mrs, Jarr. | ANd yet, when Td like pean the cash odiad a me sear ae “L have never interfered with your a idea you arrange to go yachtin; dicated that only for La Fi ; going off having a good time and Ht y OHe Johnsons and leave me to paid to get in. Constable Pelee leaving me behind, because 1 am used | tick in the house and get infantile, Brown Was asked to Investigate, aad eee ne att do me any good |PAralysis, of house nerves or typhold. he found the door leading into hall from the Pettibone barber shop unlocked. made, since no one remembers ace! several of the city officials co! through the main door. Miss abelle Mae Doolittle, noted poetess of Delhi, attended affair on t pn of P. Silas Pe rber sh: hor cau but thi b to who touched on Pettibone merely “Oh, Doolittle and I are great friends see, I shave her dadd About 10 o'clock, just after M Virginia Reel had been danced, Mrs. Elisha Q. Pertle went to the rostr and held up one hand. “T have @ surprise for you,” said. "Miss Ellabelle Mae Dooll has consented to read a poem com-| posed for this occasion, Here she ‘As the poetess walked out on stage, the crowd began to appla Miss Doolittle held up one hand. Tut, tut han Oe Rey: | only think you are very welfish, Ig till late, 7 pprcage mat ss = ton, fellow-makers ai eaear Mtn poetess then read the following Perfect valor consists in doing without witnesses all we should b@ — —-—- —————— | Visit the casino or do dozens of pleas. | as. 4 result of the nerve-racking | more for what he was originally in- |TBYm® capable of doing before the world.—ROCHBFOUCAULT, 4 AAPOPLOLLLILLS @ | G . ¢ poe Oe that wt be brought to) strain. | tend tor toll but to rest as well, | when, the be! ‘ Slwave 2 nays 0 attention the minute you se This young woman said to me, “It, [ trust that the motor will take his) i. } Early Railways H } Wind Cave ot in the place, You do not have te | was not the work in the store that was | place on the ard asphalt which the | + na Cisten . fs Bi? * return to Fall River, for the steamer | so wearing, but the Womem over the | summer makes hot and the winter | Fo I h > O y f W d i R ND CAVE, National Par) touches at the pier at nine o'clock at | teley They would or theife snows make slippery. “ i e rigin oO IndoOws HE first railway in Now York W fe 2, Na in might and on Sundays does not leave| groceries over the phone, and after; In the meantime you and I, gentle |* I State, and among the first in ne Whnek Mil out twelve! until an hour later. ‘The fare is $3|the delivery had gone call up again | housekeeper, can do much to make HOM the evidence contained tn of rectangular windows, while the America, was the Mohawk and s from Hot & ison] (Aen ee with $1 or $2 extra for state. | ut something that was forgotten his life easier by a little forethoughe | ™ F t ruins of ancient temples, Vanthe it Tome, was Nehted byt ate Genet ted |the Deadwood-Denver scenic Niwh+| thin tinge oe tee og toeat As at. “If the horse was not available and! now an there are those hereon , |i clreular opening in the dome thirty Hudson line, which was ‘ae nije. OY Mia time of the year the travel is| the delivery boy was busy there would | who pr packages for the ‘ voce & ume feot in diameter, eighty-five years ago. The Ine con. | 88> ‘angle "road of the very heavy, it is safest to engage | possibly be two or three telephone calls | horse to carry i? t windows as a vehicle) In many of the buildings of th ected Albany and Schnoctady, a dis- | West [aterooms Koln and returning before | about the forgotten article with a/ | Why not let the milic of human |t sion of light and ale into| Roman era window openings we tence of about thirteen miles. The) Wind Cave enthusiasts claim that] 4p/0 Now Yorke spend whining aa to why it had not arrived, |kindness flow every day? | Romiae eat of a ball or rovm were! Closed with thin slabs of marble, 1 Some | cavern ¢ t oO spend ¢ OO rool! D0 4 the ap i aniive Mohawk end Hudson Raliroad Com- | this cavern exceia the Mammoth | so much money: you enn tae! tute ' Mies Docl ite eee eically Mee lin use as one ago 0 100 B. m te church: OF Bt, Marting jn Rom pany was the first corporation of its|Cave of Kentucky in splendore ang|down the Hound to New Maven wt A man's own conscience 4s his sole tribunal: and he should care no pause was deatering, Vially | My Se ee ee ae ir: part | amet ar Th uaa Rion Ae ae kind chartered in the New W jin extent, maya the Popular Science #150 the round tip. The steamer] more for that phantom “opinion” than he should fear meeting @ ghost if | reatored lin the construction of buildings ‘a[t the routh end of tho treptdart Baving been incorporated ih 1825 | Monthly, Half a dozen Government gangs Pler 28 Bast River at 9.30 every| ne cross the churchyard at dark.—LYTTO. | ori she sald, “I am going tol! Oe Merete AR Ll +) Of the Forum baths being filled wit Tta completion, however, was anti- | surveys have bee Sunday morning, and the foot of Enat auction off this original poem for the| found in the elerestury raneept| a frame of bronge and gla ipated by the Baltimore and Ohio, ‘ rye arias, Made in the park, | Twenty-second Strect at 10 o'clock, | nnn | benefit of a little girl, the daughter of | openings of the temples and palaces! Jt wae not until the first and cipated gens cae . ind various private exploring You will have several hours in the | A. Mu or at the foot of Liberty Street) have time to see everything and} poor widow, who i# going to Dallan|,, nd ‘Thebes, and again in] ond centurves, however, that the wind chartered. in ©1827) which Cuened "a exp Pra that Have oan a \*Ghty Ot Rime" to gee trance anette Ms or at Jeatch the night boat home. Or you | Sy letud ares ier ardor ta be | Of OR rnae, BO Tee ae eee ioe eee ita eon crite Ce ee eras With | cries OP re eect Six will wet back to town at o'clock at} You can go to Mauch Chunk and|can have a Sunday sail of one hun-|q@ great artiet and uy her or nie, omaree Oe ows were | buildings: i * mace Pino tain’ tesstnes “4 tht * f ws Teonaees of W ave, night. You can be very comfortable | Glen Onoko, in Pennsylvania, for $1.50) dred and fifty m the ¢, which will be fine. How mu Ter ea at bibl MMOeY Ut Toward the twelfth and thirteen bevy Pee er aee Aranite ne el oave thee | undre passage. on the trip, f is 4 dining room,|the round trip, This section of the Hudson for $1 boat | am I offered f 4 Doolittle 4 c bok thar i wilh narrow) eebturies the mullioned windo' Ree eee oer Maan, gut nave never been explored, |where the service is equal to that of |country 1s often called the “Switzer. | for Poughkeepsie that leaves Frank-| ‘Ten cent mhouled Baneter i! b made up of wmail elliptical or Glas PAS A tera Cr eeeaTare tn ywa to what ths they) a good hotel, as well as an inexpen- | land of America,” and It well deserves | lin Street at nine o'clock in the morn- | O'Brien, the contractor La ' ® vulpes jnond shaped p! of glass, wer@ beng ee how far under the Wack | sive lunch counte the name. You will have plenty of|ing. You can go to far off Block Iv-| "Fifteen!" came from Mayor Cyruy| baaininat) (| used for ordinary dwelling houses: Fed Which bad & mileage of nine. beth of | M1 wy may take the explorer,| On many Sundays excursions run|time for a ride on the interesting |land and back for $1.50 on Sundays. | Perkins Walker Gis TAN ON orn vert of the! maining in Vouue more oF tener andl which were completed tn 1As7, wore) The average visitor to Wind Cave, to Atlantic City and back for $2.50, |"Switohback" rallway or on the acenic/ You can have two cool refreshing| ‘The price way run UP to twen vawoe re lanky ar ovenlins, wile) | tn the eighteenth century we reahi i ad ral roads on, the Bane Y Ni tonal Pork. travels from six to/ less than half the usual fare, This] trolley over Flagstaff Mountain, | nights on the ocean and a long day in. seven cents, at which fe pe U ly windows, with | the style of window Tartan teen it ea Riehl ne nduatrlel tines ten miles undergrou id and comes! gives you a good many hours tn the] Or on any Saturday you can take a /historic Boston, or in any of the famous | was sold to Hep 1 6 day en Ltbey the early Victorian era-the for treig! 08 y' ng purpone only. |forth into the daylight realizin {ellehttul resort before the return is{steamer at tho foot of Desbroases! shore resorts on the harbor by taking the Pollywox. Th fe the gular opening fitted with ‘fhe frat really amb bd railroad was | he had seen but a anal trac made in the evening, Street at half past twelve, or from | the all-sea route that goes through ted and uli did @ fox ‘ . wore framework and squares, filled tm wit the Charleston ane amburg, @x- x meat cavern You can go to beautiful Lake| West Forty-second Street at one in| Cape Cod Canal, ‘The fare is $4 each | the merry swirl of faren were thoae of © ¥ viaee pones and depending for tending from Charleston, 8. C., to! Wind Cave tikes its name trom, Hopateons spend a long, restful) the afternoon, which arrives at Ale way, with $1 and Mikes Doolittle and 1 . ® he Arphitdotural ef on the mould Augusta, © @ distance of 137 miles. strong current of Fo whieh al. day at that forest-fringed expanse of} bany at quarter to eleven that aame| [pn fact. you ¢ ha w . % ef jambs ond the lintel friezes and @or: It Was opened in 1833, and Was then | most constantly surges in or out of water for @ round-trip fare of $1 You can spend the reat of the ant things every ‘ Clone an wr . nheew the window top—mat the longest continuous raiiway in the he entrance. Lo is seid that thin Jed | Take _taiiroad ferry at the foot’ night in the city and the next morn- {short column ¢ to othe om 6 vies, BOM) ainples of which are still to be sls ak Ww Lhe discovery of the cave im 1681,' 91 West Twenty-third Bireet at 4.50 ing take traim or trolley to Saratoga! contain them AL were pleased. beg 6) Mylesese, re eeu (he feumlna' io Lue old Quarters of Dew. a> ' subject ) You vootly et tale , only be @ sare cle Cocke 0th detabt ate MILD complied Mark how a # pretty © . vary | Hut al ) somuidly at her most feretd Aetterta, * ‘a ral de of approvel and her runtien of « e a pampered poodio torneth ap tte ese . S piffeth seornfully at hie dinner erve how raptur y & Hepediot [eteneth «ble « melden tetthetty onne, and ¢ Hear, hear!” at her wal lark how gladly he ruoneth her errands earieth ber burdess, end ameneth her shostrings f glove ® bumbly he walleth to be “notieed.” and how gratetully he th ber slightest « Hut a Bachelor yawnet ost brilliant ae and tnterrupteth her m jones to Inquire 1¢ it be for dinner Yea, only when ehe persuadeth him to talk of HIMSELF doth be awake frow bie letharay Hehold, @ married man is covered with confuston and thrilled willy vanity {f a dameel so much ae afteth bis coat ale or pinneth @ owes n bin lapel. Yea, he t# 80 sentimental! Mut a Bachelor taketh a KIS® as casually he Caketh an olive en@ accepteth her devotion a yteth a elgarettc. Yea, he a himself gractous if be PERMITTETH her to run her fing through en while he holdeth her hand he feeleth eayefully tor the HOOK wledement languldly at ber t fascinating conversa he 1 hair; and ¢ therein Go to ried For Men take the trouble ¢ But a Pachelor saith in ynot HAVE to be * WHY are all the Nice Meo mam not all the Nice NICE tn verfly, vert Men are 4 but all the Marrie@ And ta nob —_—--+- —__—. Nand f the satisfied sit a quit tinted ave the sole The Jarr Family By Roy L. MeCardell Miaining Co, ( Jo nothing: those whe ere world.—-LANDOR, nefactors 8 by ‘The Prem 1 « New York Evening World.) the cashier at the of+ | an met away from the office bought a launch and) early you might come home and take fe to get away from|meout. never get anywhere, T it — the office a little early and try Itjece anything. T have no friends out,” began Mr, Jarr at breakfast the | take me out on their float 1 woul os other morning. “It's a pity Mr. his friends to go along.” wt wo if I had. Pa aive a ugbt tomy own family, 4 try to think of their ha yhnson doesn't ask jlittle t the wives of ppiness said Mrs. Jurr, coldly | whotiy of my own seittan ries “Why, t just what Iwas com.) “won't go if that's the way yo! ing to,” replied Mr. Jarr with simu-) look at * remarked Mr. Jerr D lated enthusiasm. “We're going to! only thought" eee if it's a safe boat, and if it ts “You only thought 0: | there'll be lots of Little trips the rest | terrupted Mrs Jarr, | ; | tonty want yo Jot the summ | u to do what you reall; | “and if it isn't safe, if Johnson t#| Want to do. If tt wouldn't give ss | more pleasure to be with your wife | intoxicated, as he generally ts, then | he'll upset the boat and you'll ie ene children one pleasant afternoons hy ye is a f yourself,” ins “Ol, very well, frowned, for that Johnson ucan go With those you seem bachelor, 1 all bachelors are sel- prefer, But if you were iM, 4 and he'll save himself, because | Were per t you #88, what would such peoe ® as th..t man Johnson do for you? don't talk Pp always saved, and jimarried men eee: Rs or nervous prostration or else!" a i | “Not at all!" eried Mr, Jarr, “Come |to ila of it, I'd much rather spend the afternoon with you, the childrent Want to taleg “Oh, never mind me and the children, so with your friends. The ohildren and can stay home," sald Mra, Jarn, \ © siree, we'll go have a Iittle plos hic of our very own,” replied Mr. Jarn' “I'd rather do that. I'm going to tx it to get off early from the office every jonce in a while in the nice wea | and we'll take lots of little trips.” “Til wager we won't," Jarr, bie And she was right. For when Ma, Jarr “ducked, he expressed it, the water excursion, and came home curly, Gertrude, the light running do« mestic, informed him that Mre, Ji had gone downtown shopping wi Mrs, angle and would not be bone ost at this late day, But 1 do on this occasion at least, t be so selfish,” asked Mr, Jarr, well enough you wouldn't have me ntloned to me that you could Ket away from the office y. only you had planned to go off on a Jamboree with that Johnson and th men down at the office replied Mrs. Jarr. “Why, yes 1 would, You see th is the first day we have had a chance to get a say, at 4 o'clock.” Mr. Jarr began to explain, “The boss is out of town and"— “And on the first occasion you make up @ party of men and go oft on a@ yachting trip’—— “Ive only an eighteen-foot launch,” ventured Mr, Jarr. “1 do not care how long it js or how wide it is,” @ald Mru, Jarr,- “I to pre think th ye However, no arrests were ing me um ifsn, how? “You know the tthe | OF 1 ose Mr the ‘um she ttle 1a." | the ud. | /