The evening world. Newspaper, November 26, 1917, Page 14

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The eaetnny Ny World, _ Sayings of IVirs. omon | SATARLASHED WT JOorrn POLrrz Pusteres Paty b: ' the Pree ™ y Recent Pontey ty es Poe : By Helen Rowland we ms a PTS Precioen Cx OO 0 Gn Come Wtming On Cen Hon tre Oremag Wet, SORE PULITZER, 5. ee v4 i Teankegiving Day Peaim of a War-Wite, which fo Mrs, Golamena, ator Mnatent and a eet | Ail my Wife have theaked Thee perfanctoriiy. Aa Coamiten in ina For ts asd lore and health and Neoninew—aag vom0e a04 atetract Weestngs ike wate Cheeet Yet even while | thanked Thee I cried out gota lantly for “MOnE!” For in my heart 1 was never eatiahed Hat now at leet do | know THUN thankfulness, You, for how iittletor how passing Mttie.a gratety Heuold, | am deeply and subtiantty grateful for the ball pound of sugar whorewith | am biewed this dag. O10 onan | am thanafal for the seont beg of eat whites ifed from ny grocer yesterday; yeu, and for the seven precious potatoes hich Fate ath 90 kindly allotted mo, | Lo, 1 that wae once so dificult to please at breakfect am now glagdened leyond Measute whea I descend each moruing to fod an UGG and @ ora, muffin awaiting me, 1, that was once ao epicure and @ prunebater, am now Siled with um | Otterable gratitude when the luncheon tavle showeth forth a pork ehop anda and a dinser of BEEPSTHAK covereth me with unspeakable j Geligh and humble thankfulness! Verily, verily, 1 thank Thee, O Providence, for my last year’s furs that thoy aro atti! wearablo, | Yea, I am grateful that last week I was adie to purchase @ patr of $4 whore for $10.50 and a $6 hat for $17 | 1, that was known as 4 taxicab fend, am thankful for the umbrellas which I once despised and the overshors which I once scorned that | may | WALK abroad tn the rain and snap my fogers tn the faces of chauffeurs, I thank Thee for tho “cheaper cuts,” even for eboulder chops and round 69 One Mor, THe awertsatTen Lak Pe et Og Pe eg ed yo dd ME 68., eres . > NO, 20,541 WHO GETS IT? HE EVENING WORLD'S Investigation of the retail prices whieh small consumers in this city have to pay for ment as compared with the wholesale cost of that same meat to the butcher, shows more than ever how Just is the demand—born of the daily experience of hard-working men and women trying to arn enough to take care of their families and themsely this question answered: \ Who gets the money the average wage earner, despite all his care and economy, now finds it impossible to save? Into what pockets go all those extra cents and dollars his wi! has constantly to add to what she formerly paid for necessities? | How many families in New York could testify that never have they figured closer or denied themselves more, but that notwith standing all their self-denial and thrifty housekeeping, they barely sto have intance with them, manage to save enough by each fresh cutting down of expenses to meet another advance In tho cost of what they must have to live? tteak, that I now have a bowing acqua Yea, verily I thank Thee for the passing of tho corner cafo and fof the high price of the cup which cheers. Yor these have made it BO much easter for an husband to find his | way home evenings. | I thank Theo that I am NOT a Dlondo at the present price of peroxide nor a siren at the present cost of perfumes and cosmetics. T thank Thee that al! those things which my consclence and my coum | try tell me that I must relinquish (even sugar and candy and butter and oil and fried things) are FATTENING, for thus I am consoled for their loss, But above al already impossible. Unless a man can save, what becomes of his confidence, his courage, his faith in the future? And the housewife who studies how to make a roast of beef, that used to cost half what it does now, last the family twice as long—what encouragement Is it to her thrift to find the butcher} steadily on the way to doubling the cost again? } Homely problems—but upon their solution depend the well- being, strength and staying-power of millions, “Prices due to the war.” Inquiry by The Evening World shows that retail meat dealers ' in this city use that excuse along with the familiar “overhead” and To the average worker saving is increasingly difficult, if not 1 I thank Thee, O Providence, for the Philosophy which | war and adversity have taught me! Yea, I thank Thee for the power of Self-Dental and Self-Abnegatio: jeven of Self-Immolation on the altar of Humanity, of which 1, a Light : | welght and a Dancer-in-the-Sun, have become possessed! I thank ‘Thee that I, a dweller {n Modern Babylon, have at last learn¢ “cost of labor” to try to explain why they take a profit of from Baer lee nec ites " Scene! THANKFUL for Little Things anddo a | take Joy in life's Common nga! . 100 to 200 per cent. on various kinds of dressed meat sold to small For Jo 1 am a WOMAN—yet at last Iam CONTENT! consumers, rily, verily, War worketh great miracles! In many cases the big hotels and restaurants get the best cuts, | Housekeepers are given third grade meats at first grade prices, _ ae ———— + Here, then, is one big pocket that appears to get a no {ncon- | h k es D U siderable part of what the average wage-carner ought to be able t } : | | an Ss gl V 1 n g ] nner save but cannot, ; fy rey ; , : r ' ] “There is no standard price of meat in any of the five bor- p F 3 ‘cn; . at | H Vv : : r Pee 8 On tae n a Hoover Basis oughs,” so a local packing-house expert is quoted: i i 7 Every market charges its own price. MFrequently It seems P Et, , CS as if the retailer charges just as much as he thinks his cus- |: +3 ae ; \ i) t R st |War Time Menu for Evening World Readers as Prepared j } tomers will pay, without regard to quality, or} a of GF VW aig im : Fs by Nestor A. L. Lattard, Maitre d’ Hotel of the Plaza 4 The new City Commissioner of Markets, Dr. Moskowitz, | —— --- scale 2k geet Aa teem i = | CONOMY should be the arash = FE rd " »proaching: . ' admits that smal] retafl meat dealers are gouging the public and A id ° ) ) . | ra Oar wh 2 ths rs rit Oysters \ { uanksgiving, whe @ spi says that so far no branch of food administration has found a ft e ou In Ove: | h e a Yr Yr F aml ] lof the day so strongly resembles that ‘omato Soup way to stop them: | | stern Puritan Thanksgiving of long . ° omar © have a great deal sui wrWa Extoillttie pewar ever thajralajien, «Wa exnltae {t By Nixola Greeley-Smith By Roy L. McCardell Certainly we have a great to) | Baked Striped Bass direct methods, such as the force of public opinion, And the i (Ooprrighiy 1951 bs ses oule Poeiiatae Os. cobs wen York: reste Werlay P ale y . ape or Times when uny jaview feasting Potato l a “op v _ 7 ~ ey is Jopyright, L017, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New Yor’ Evening World,) ure times when i lavish fe is wee can retina te sell to retailers who do not co-oper | No.1.—LOVE WORLD'S GREATEST CONS TRUCTIVE FOR “cc e'VE hod lovely weather;; then I know you are lucky, My w! fai |toela be strangely out of place. . . _—— ate, But these are indirect Influences. ARY JOHNSTON, author of |Naine, In the later episodes of “The it's been what you call| Lena, can tell your fortune from tea| Here then ar basls menu |! Stuffed Roast Turkey “It seems that the solution ts a change in the law. The | © Have and to Hold,” ot| Wanderers” the rise of love with cngine summer, ain't {t?"| leaves when you drink tea, but Ican|drawn up by Nestor A. I. Lattard, Giblet t } real remedy apparently is to license the retailer and give the "Louis Rand” and “The Long! wnat Geveloped, | “Men | asked Gus, the cafe prop: tell your fortune—anybody's fortune—|maltre d‘hotel of the Plaza, and one! riblet Gravy ” ome r 0 Of ° ile ‘i nye 30 | | 5 local administrator power to revoke the license. Roll," bay write|in thon: GROW WORE RE Dep ther | “fudian suint ¢ Mr.| by the way they drink when !t ain't|of the masters of the cooking art. It!! Baked Lye Hominy One thing is certain. American workers who are now ex- ten a new oook| But the a vory dl | Jarr, “Yes, w had a fine late] tea {nas the two virtues of belng 6! shad ¥ * ag: ae Fei el pi nla sie which is not a ; at least for aj autumn, but I the winter ia] Greatly Interested at this statement |and sufficient. No item on the bill| Mashed Yellow Turnips P 0 save what they can for r country as well as for love story but the| “quale unprofitable, | about due . Sul, no man can} . Mr, Jarr demanded a dem-| will be difficult to prepare, Every) Beets in Butter themselves and their families have a right to demand that saving story Ve it-| wrong in this, and that love tell what the day will bring or the| v7’ woman can follow this schedule and | shall not be made impossible by the unrestrained rapacity of those self, The novel 9] as ilways been the grea weather will be.” | said Gus, "T can tell what's | know that she will have a dinner cer- | Green Salad Beh /desiitn neoessitiée called “The Wan. | **uetlve force in the world. do you think them gipsey ladies | coming to people even by the way they tain to please the most fastidious, pbb 8, vurse love is self-made. ; “ys - . dorera’’ and: infantecedentn de cot bere ce can?” asked Gus, ax an olt Romany] vrder drinks, Seo that man down! and none of the dishes call for things || C//oed Oranges a They have as much right to demand this protection for what! < F ” ination. But the most exquislt woman hobbled in and offered to tell re that my bartender, is that are hard to get or unduly ex- ges and Bananas they earn as Americans who must give of their wealth to aid the! {| af ats ow ana Bourah 18 ths ¢ tho past, pre and futuro for a] serving with a siug of the old stuff, | pensive. H Coffee y ‘ in : , wid no one says: * ise eee ar prices or no prices’? % ‘ tonal 4 nation have to demand that no private greed shall take toll of that, xcutesxree: |!" o in the tly, Just think where | Quarter Der hand ele hls ear aeectncataain aeant [by Sealine padita male Sas ee Shick thay contribaite I. the mysterious) It came trom! “Phere ta no beauty You baat it, Indy, anld Gus vit] Me Jarr nodded in axe , |food_conserv Hiss re peas ren te Gaara they con! ' |foree which haa written the great |!0 the rose, emember dreadful | there's any quarters comin | el uid Gus, “that fe ¢ this menu, at the request of The Eve- | 88% opting this suggest: By investigating local meat prices The Evening World has | Pema, patnted the great pletures, ac- ae . Hquor store these war times, crogy|‘bink he drinks, and would get In- | ying Wo It is drawn up tn Obes feed an army for several days, as supplied one specific answer to the question: tuated the great deeds of men and], Retires bl eranve believe my own palm with ‘em.’ ulted if you sald he did, He PS observance of the Food Administra. | ¢ pares with the old-fashioned PP! F 4 ‘ | world with ¢ t tle. tf | Thanksgiving fe ‘ | ¢ e C *! women, since the world began, |} Was invented by the devil “Did it ever « » you that the | it up Just a lit He out from tion's injunctions to be careful of | Thanksgiving feasts to which many of Who is pocketing - dollars so few Americans find them-| if thero is a moral to Miss Johns|suin Island” he has lin what | kind of people nd they can} "8 work and sa ho bout six! every edible product. Even Mi have been accustomed. And cers selves permitted to save ston's Interesting tion of Jove | (Ul languor the pursued| give good fortune to others, never a day, and never lots the fecl-| trooyer himuelf couldn't have done | *nly tt would be difficult to choose a : A > : their blologteal ¢ ‘ . ov | (ng—What you call it?—dle down,” ; . better variety of dist the * ores it na to be that in the past, | J until the! soem to have any of their own € nat you wh Seonomy, patriotism and a y lishes, all of ther Unless lpportance of that question is recognized, and At least, love waa the aver celle Maori > of thel asked Mr. Jarr. “That old gypsy The stimulation,” suggested Mr.) oq Peer il arpslna? te ne 8 ine nsive, wholesome and eaally/ every answer to it promptly examined and acted upon, something | wou. tor arst heroine ia prime-|siort skirt, whi ne et tooked som that 1 slipped | 24° [the use of this menu imperative, | 400k: This war time menu also will . * ift sip hehe LPR dl cant tc % ° . os, ‘ a went hoa use OF V ’ @ jaave Madame Housewife c *y ic sure to happen to the prosperity of a people who can ill afford 4! woman who, while wandering in} ba it Vorthw ; hauin | her a quarter for tn Yes, that : n ae wunt of food that can belusual holiday labore ee oe ee to lose their grip on cheerfulness, industry and confidence at this ‘"° ‘ with her bate, discovers | candid ma aT Aee A “Well, ther 1 give her a quarter A - oo ee : amu after mys Mo keep hig ; Raglir that n knock frujt trom a treo Lov vis | for luc usked Gus | epoch in their history. nt has : Ay, but he w with a stick. ‘To show off her new ( e] “put et ! ing tn that > ad Jee se Aes 6 inte b, And if he = . A crest of unty J pep he won't get : Letters From the Peo ple |® male observer, who promplly takes!of chivalry; now It by feeling your bean with what noople will have to keep him tilt he| Rican inid comenetodtions ts x the stick away from her, and when| 4nd ashes, as it does ¢ you call free know . Neteakh Gud anil Giweue abink - "ease Wi co ations to 150 words, sho attempts to recover it Knocks her e novelists 4 “ ophrenology, you un," sal eine ee eee 7 mURS: Re rt Protests Guarding Cons that wealthy corporations should get SOwe With It one phase Pregeeee jut an't et mauara: dial LI ere ame Ma rty. the rvices ¢ ¢ : . ale deals with * ar - Pha what said,” arn | Aro: s is o's In J ase the Indl ah ea issln Wend fecha ee waee SiNthe: tfooDe ae Nerds iw with a Cave ntw—thowe ‘who hive | “That's what T satd," Gus went on| poiitics, He's always treating and B ae Y P I saw in The Evening World that soiiery reside: tae cue mands of ex aman'h sucaeestil effort to) induce | Formlauen, lave | O calmly, “Some can tell It by looking RiavarEch a eclilloai lanceaci: y ames . oung Reco cticats hea’ duce, the a cS y to guard Property at BAU RTINE (he ain ive wits thenia Ce) wan Cheenti’ | ay zoe mM i : ni aie ny | a g Ea OR atiaah OIeGIAD, eae Coprright. 1017, bythe F Lo, (The New York Eveniug World.) t Se Ree is ary, Ls. and he efor She does evoriat: sinkey A RL i BE u sign your name. wt | hi pigohtn ey ‘ f - s ne ow AG & = age fe tee b Segerich S sera | Wheat We Should Do About Treason| 'Y! {2F the highly practical reason the poster martira mac ne Ala not | that’s easy." layer i fou I FARE A HME G| “Noes Sr CAME ERAN CORE OAM HOUSTON, TEXAS em with troops to guard docks an¢ raw ! fe did no naven wate vich,. Itc ae fips, Bes - Be tis” eee should. teks in the Se ™) Unt vit i easior for two to hunt food] ANd Breat tnapiration In his subject, | “How tw It enwy?” Mr. Ja af eee of the | from Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and) " +s 7 | To the Kaitor of The Eveving World | than one Later on, if the poenis inay be taken as u test “Well, it 4 a " 2 A : o will ever} lahoma, army furnish woldiers for wealthY) Your editorial, “The Paras sunt| must havo fount out that tt Many persons may be AGO Lang OO UA erie ! 4 Who do " asked erpetuated by | Tt Was a fooltsh move on the part of corporations when they are too mean! Rignt* y Ee mn pi « wast the sul of ¢ many isking me | Mr. Jare, rory of the! trdvised leaders that left the Alamo to specify reasonable hours 4 ieee as splendid, truly patriotic | easier still to send the man ont hunt-|in forbidden love, t ohun orate 2 2 $19, I know your Yan iwalak Prishormarnwherhaat in an almost defenscleas state. An decent living wages for guards? poe any Sis It expresses the by himself, but Miss Johnaton| fer to tink and read and talk about | luck ts bad,” * "And if you! tho big tow and coal business and got Oa care, | bosseaston of the Alamo meant pos ecent ie wag eu eentiments of all real Atmeriee shot discuss the further overran {romantic Tove. So that Iv what we [sign It to a choos t 2 ig pig tow and coal business an 8 in which Lteut.| session of San Antonio, the most ime In all the daily papers of ja T take off my hat to all of the{of that frst Ide In tho third hail diy euss in the next articl breceipt for re ae by olty contracts, 1 ¢ Wh Col. Willltam B.! om the border, But advertisements appeared for men tol ofticiuls wha he ; iroan i 5 —_ - treats ha makes a big nolse about it ean ital bar ry left it with a guard of apply at a Hroad street address. | ¢p Ree fo ‘Unearth | Mado woman F + for the first . . . with t buneh, and wants ¢ ! | men and started upon an " at a na ae enue | these unholy things. Lat the trial be| time, that man fs a4 much the fathe H dl Sh k O h . . i Benes mane mander, declared ition to capture Matam 2 Prom there mon were sent to” Chel tui wn tcl vote eet rat time, that am I an ue the fate andiing Shirkers in Other Days | sven wins. Sovoiy wants wine, Mander, deciared /cxpedition to capture Matamoram 206 Erie Railroad, at the foot of Cham: diamante of the guilty auickiy made, makes this known to her tet Drs HE man who seeks to avold mill- like manner be taken up, #0 that they : don't asieh, unle ¥ tho politi netther yleld nor] of Hhis move reached the ‘Toxas Gover= be Si t There t men found] FS MCRY Mas vanessa cist ervice by every possible | mt e rie ¢ poss of this district hen ev Miialnaer nor he ordered to bers Stre in ound] Any loyal teachers who are mem up to that time hac t wery by every possible | must ef fight for thelr cou if bend, “Victory or|iman available he parapet 4 jor desert against it Later, when the ¢ 0 French and fine | POY is got enough and F | knows ft, he insists on ordering a oloniea rebelled | other round, and xo it looks as thou, eberger that It was twelve hours’ work at 25) of the T cents an hour, They all w 8 bas been heard from tn all lands and ages. Ho was a familiar deatht 1 shall never surrender nor one could gee that the Peachers’ Union should 1 retreat!” was the messago he eent| Mexicans would strike at this strong ed ONL to rebign at onee. The Presi: » lig | man with the mys t of| When tho Wise Woman of ty Let them pay at least §3 a day for Board of & trite! ngure in previous chapters of Ameri- fror 4,; Point suddenly made weak. ‘ravi ourd of Education shuuld hears this announcem: eure 48 chi 8 rn ainst Hritish rule, the i A from the historic mission on Feb, £4, | > - ‘Travis ight hour shift, three shifts al eve bache: der}! sout nlatory, Jongreas took notice'nt > he's tho generous fe that never) igo py 5 ‘ rallied such scanty forces as could be an elg' every teacher to withdraw, and thoae|to the people can history Congress t tice of the s § |1836. These words he repeated in| had in that sparsely. settled yee Re * IN| Jets anybody else buy.” “And me?” asked M:. Jarr, : rt to listen to It and should be summarily she tells the mott ey Que-!4 set Of rules regarding 1 first two of Which road Kubsequent messages, the last of/and flung hir |which was sent March And he/| few oth day, and I can guarantee any of these} who wil) not When the ¢ on against f into the Alamo, A wealthy corporations which want! dismissed bec was be! ie middle brave \ t ne os away the great seeret that s bec was ne i re Ene: You are not to enlia r “Oh, * sald Gus, “You " Petia: Fave spirits joined him, United States troops to save money) Why are those who ref 440 ules le and ‘throw Rareelt of the elght century the slacker not able-bodic situeracne h, you,” sald eS a ain't! wade good tis declaration, 188 men Lpoid ui a Davy Crockett and James for them that I oan supply more than | tng slen | Bo was in evide A newapaper print-| jarcber, but ay ‘men ee od, 3 8° ver going to get rich either, You jowlv, But it was too late. ‘The pledge of aliogta continue In the servi Why were the Instructions and ex.| cerpts from the law which ace 3; giving up their lives to hold back| Mexicans were on tne march and soos more than 6,000 Mexicans, The Alamo| surrounded the old mission. Through- fell, but {ts fall aroused Texas ag} out the siege and the closing chapter : Travis ted bis me : nothing cls could have done, and the| rat peven Mae gue cranek ae ad toland that it 1s @ Pity she way ever|ed in New Haven during 1768 oon- Pp city? | born. ; tains this note | So far children have their] “About mothers’ t © has| thelr habitation i how-| order to avoid th ar ane may } omplainia whiey| don't drink to amount to anything, nn tapy | render them incapable of a soldier's) DUt you waste too h time on mo) 4 hundred men who left} duty, you must give atter that] in my pla That don't get you no in this colony in} you may not be imposed upon, per iS aR nar + GES = hocessary defense | take the opinion of a surgeon \ Nd) where, @ thousand ex-soldiers, sailors and- marines to guard thelr property, They don't want this. They want some-| thing for nothing. |t | Jed the presentation of these pt r 1isco —.— | Americans who had settled there rose| he shcend skill of I am an honorably discharged A 1 Dledg bit inate aro}and military service of their country for suspicion.” | ~e | + scomd skill of 4 high order, and J Pll IE ‘ pet re ee not enforced? Thts is America, Quite pr than women children} and fied In a New Sark auvers ‘ RAs one n a ; OUR $80,000,000 CHAUFFEURS, | ‘8. one man to throw off the Mexican | With ht» little band of 183 heroes kept f a ee Shentins ¢ Army! a few of us want to keep tt America, | Mould Bet more pre : . t wore taken up and preased into ard to moral Py iim |yoke, Now the name of Travia hag|tie Mexicans at bay until by sheer 3 ' ne ae earl! New Terk Meena There has been and still is too much aed Li esac they Gecording to| sobricty 1n particular; let | HE wages ¢ na 0 Heensed heen bestowed upon the army canton- of i. ubere they swarmed over yf uard an, am again willing tol“mushinoss,” Do it now and do it] saree to lea anole eS And At Is | ners distiNKUisl us from our ony | chauffeurs in this 8 aire of- Fort Sam Houston, Texas, ' and, magnecre tha tow mea ; serve my country, but do not believe right, Fa Mad aie epoca eet bolr Wherever these disloyal, much ag the cause we ar ee ij ficlally estim to be abou the 90th Division 13 being | dete a had kept their. pledge moves J Vide Calbers cowardly deserters Gy they wilh io $80,000,000 a year, Imobilized, This ia made up of troopy| to surreuder nor retreat, ae ae

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