Newspaper Page Text
MM !Rmw V if: &.mmmmm Tne Evening World Daily Magazine,' Mondi tte saunfo. MTABT.IHimn nr tobkimi nm.iniM afceUshed Dally Bseept Sunday by the Press PobllaMf Compear, No. eJ to f 41 Park How. New Tork. A fMX!.r.L,,',TS!"RuPr MmiI, t Park Ttnw. ft Tndnf.NS,V,H,5.".w' Jreamirar. Park How. JOSBril PUUTzpiu. Jr., H.ercurv, Park ftow. The Day of Rest Otwrla. MU Vr Tk PrM raUMtae o. fTa. Nr Tri IraKimf Wrl By Maurice Ketten ,t,xwMi 1 1. li i.i u i. ii- nr rrrnm-SLTirSLTTLm Entered at id TV,. 1. rim. . t v. d..ij'i.,! t.ti- ciHusn tiai. 10 Tho Kveains Waria far itia T'nii.,1 at.,.. ' and Canada. 7 Month tO For Knaland and lha Contloenl ana All Countries In tha International Poatal Union. On Tear 11.71 Ona Month II j VOLUME 55. .NO. 19,445 T ON SOLID GROUND. O-DAY, mora effectively than ever before In the history of Ihn nation, the United States Government takes lirm and corn potent hold of the Federal hankinr avstom. - g f With the opening of tho regional resorve banks, every working of which hai been carefully arranged, the dangers of restles- of artificial depression, of clique manipulation and tectional dii- ttaTtoaee in the complicated financial life of the land are reduced to saw minimum. A great war Jn Europe ia upietting the banking and commercial aatyeartsnsNrt of the whole world. American have specisl reaion to ml priii and confidence in their country, which, at thin very moment .af ilmoat world-wide perturbation, putt ita banka upon a newly-built foundation of stability and itrongfli. A PERMANENT MARKET BUREAU. UKPARTMENT OF MARKETS it propoied aa a permanent A part of the city government. Tho Mayor' Food Committee ii preparing a bill ao to amond the City Chartor that a Market Board made up of member from each of tho borough shall snelataia and manago all open market, apportion apace and atalls, eolltct rental and (elect new site.' Multiplication of municipal market and the establishment of a Mf terminal market in each borough are feature of tho programme. The public market idea ha at laat taken definito hold. Tho sacces of the Municipal market in Manhattan ha put beyond all question the practicability of extending, them. There aro two roasont why the city should make the promotion and management of market ao of ita regular duties. (1) The market and tho market baaket are the best inducements ta thrift ever urged upon extravagant and convenience-loving citiren. (I) Earope'e war wee early aeited upon hereabout a a pretext to iftiee tfce coat of food auppliet to the poor. While the war laita New Yerkara will be constantly expoied to raid of this sort. Now, of all 'tastes, we need eome efficient bureau to watch food prloe. JOBS FOR THE JOBLESS. TBI new Municipal Employment Bureau, which open to-day, ii item to be regarded by the public a a bona fide atterant to And jobe for worfcera snd workers for job not at a eheritablu erice or aa a laat resort for people who can find work in no other way. l. will not invite workers from out of town to como to New York, 14 will not seek to work upon, the sympathies of people in scouring pete lor asfliceBtt. it offer Itself a a business agency aiming in a aorsaei way and according to scientific method to put thoso who waai jeao id teas with thoso who want worker. AIL. VII- - - ' - il l. 5 t M.n. UMir pVMIO gOOdCS Ol HUB KlUU I1BVO 181100 DeCgUSO HlOrO ZPA1 1 coBsBon eense went into their organization and because tho faMe aevar took these seriously. Whothor the new bureau in this tty k ta ameeeed or not depends upon how quickly it can win public ' iabstett and confidence. "ft 'Y vr to' V pi? A GREAT SOLDIER. NOLAND has lost one of its greatest military heroes perhaps A t 1 A ( Uf .IIP 1 I wa giva-MK aince Wellington. flaa at a snra1. W.ln Mn! il.- ... i m- , 1 - iwuj ma 01 nam I'nMmIuU Lord Boberta has been one of atcadfait toldiering, of brilliant ' fw"rwmr. orave iigure in muia nirough half his fourscore pm, kere of Kandahar, at aixty-oisht organizer of British . UfJl a AA I. .All! .A I i 1 . pass stamva Airrca, ne was sun at eigiuy-two an indefatigable worker Vaai adviser in his country's need. England might well worship tlii wiry eld snaa u the highest type of it warrior devoted, tircle. Said and daring aa a fighter, "Bobs" was alio a hrewd and prac tiaal army expert. Amid all honors he waa simple and abstemious ixteen.years ago Lord Roberts's only son and heir, a Lioutflnant l la the Boyal Artillery, was killed at Tugela trying to save his gun. jow tno.greaiofi anu last remaining of tins soldier lino is dead. trvin J. 11-- . i I . t. t.- I It ... " iv vcucr mid rnijr 10 wiiicii no gnvo in an ana uttermost. Ht1 Hits From Sharp Wits. I 1 I of MCTej 1 a j a I sbbbbBS ?HAFT Nl INSslDG.THe HOUSE H llLL ,-llJiliST A Lr iijmjwinriii"""'Mi aaaa Greatest Battles in War History By Albert Payson Terhune. njvxnjtqjruvvvTrniJVY A Rao for AehUvmnt The Jarr Family Hit Rhv'F. TV1r.roQll ftrarlrr I iaaaiawaiaaiaaiaaaiaiaiaaaiai allaa,VWaWrVwrw-W'UU'UyrUVXXV MjSj'jSjljSjS'J'0lisjSJ'jSjljlJjSjljljljljSjJjlOljljljljSjljl Mr. Jarr at Last Chases His Hoodoo' Clear Off Into Neutral Territory Oorrrlfkt. mi, br Ta. Pnai MIMkk Oo. m Km Tort t'mlni Wortl). . U ME RMM AC AND MONITOR The Fight That Revolutionized Naval Warfare. HIS i the atorr ot a duel rather than of a battle a duel that changed the whole course ot naval warfare and, made possible the armored ehtpn now battling In the North Sea and elsewhere. Bo the "dual" was more far-reaching In Ita effect than la maar an epoch-marking land battle. , In olden days, sea-fights were waged In wooden Bailor, rowed 7 slavos and protected only by tho shields that hunt; over tho wooden gunwales. ' Next came floating wooden castles, more awkward than canal hoata: their hnlla elided, their salln cumbersome nnd futlln. Those In turn gave place to the trKn frigate, awltt and slender, 'seemingly the last word In naval warfare. Steam then took tho place of sails; and last ot" all came the Ironclad. Here la tho tale of tho Ironclad's birth: North and South were at each other's throata ln the second year of oar clvlt war. The Confederates had eelaed the Norfolk (Vo.) Navy Yard, aaa had t11rn.1l anu of Ita rnntiired ahlna the Merrlmac Into A BOrt of moT- rabts fort. On her hull they placed a metal structure that looked llko a barn roof, and that no cannon ball or shell couia pierce. Bho was armed with ten (runs, and had an Iron btak for ramming. Her draught was 22 fcot. Nowadays, tho Merrlmaa would he a joko. Mod ern projectiles would riddlo her crudo armor-plato llkcr cheese, and mJlern cruisers could make circles around her. nut In that era all other ships were of flimsy wood. Among; tho blind, a ono-eyed man la king, and among wooden ships the new Iron monster was Invincible. The United States Government learned tlirougn spies inai xno con federates were bulldlnsr the Merrlmac. And the Government realized how easily auch a ship could scatter the wooden fleot of tho Federal navy and, tinacnthed. bombard New York or even wasnington. ao nnomcr ironciair waa hntlt to checkmate this new Confederate movo In tho war game. John Ericsson was the new Ironclad's designer. He caiica tils inven tlon the Monitor, and ho built It nt Oreenpolnt Tho best orr-hana de scrlptlon of the Monitor was given by tho Southerner who called It "a round rhPHohnr on n raft." Ths low. nat aecK was almost on mo Yraier-nno. xn evllndrlenl little nlne-foot turret offered scant target. Hoth turret and dccM wero armor aheathed. Many experts laugnea ai me queer vessel ana pro nhesled she would sink like a lump of lead. They nlso declared, in scicnunq magazines, that Ironclad ships were an Impossibility. Even tho Govern-! ment had small confidence In the Idea. On Mnreh . 1862. the Merrlmac (renamed the Virginia) steamed out of, Norfolk to Hampton Roads, where lay a United States fleet. The fleet fcpened; fire on hor, but Its heaviest shots rattled orr Her armor-piate ns narmicssiy as hailstones. She sank tho United States warship Cumberland, sot fire to, tho Congress, nnd made for tho Minnesota, which had run aground. But tho water was too shallow for her great draught, nnd sho withdrew for the When tho Merrlmac returned early noxt morning to finish destroying tho Union fleet the Monitor had Just arrived in Hampton Roads and was nwnltlnir her. Then beiran the strangest duel in all history. in.. nf..imin Knrn Hnwn nn her ttnv fne. blazlnir lW.1V nt close OllnrterS. but the shot and shell that had so easily ripped wooden ships to match wood either missed the bobbing little turret or bounded from Its rounded sides without doing any damage. The Merrlmac then tried to ram her foe, but the terrible Iron beak struck glanclngly and without effect- The Monitor was faster and easier to manoeuvre, ana ner (iraugni waa only ten and a half feet. So she played around tho Merrlmac like n King bird nrouna a crow, uuubhik wi uimk, mm uutivmi u,e confederate ehlp's upper plates, crushed her heavy strangest Dual I timbers, outpointing hor at every turn. A foolish In All History. I Government order forbado tho tiso of moro than fifteen Mmkmwmmi(i pounds of powder to each gun charge. This prevented tho Monitor from doing still worso dnmage. Out of forty-seven shoU (nt slx-minuto intervals) sne Lcoreu iwemy hits, and In turn waa struck twenty-two times, a oursiinB pneii -ui jnni wnnnded the Monitor's commander. Lieut. Worden. His second In command let tho Monitor drift away while Worden's wounds were dressed. T,ho Merrl mac then withdrew from the Roads. The duel was ended. Neither vessel was used again. The Monitor same in a gnio mat. namo year off Cape Hatteras, and the Merrlmac was destroyed to keep Tier from capture. Dut tljelr work was accomplished. Tho world had ween what Ironclads could do. In a slnglo day navai wariaro-waa ruuiuwu.i.u. OwrlfM, 1U, br Tk. Prat PublUblH Co, (Tb. Htm Trk S'ibIbi World). Aa oaan mouth Indicates a vacant retaar than aa opn mind. . Aa a rule nothing much happens wwaa the uneipeetad happ.na.-L. aarat News. Whan a man boasts of having dons Ma duty ba betrays himself to b not t the Mbit of doing It. i , Aamear th things to' ba avoided In aefveisatloc ara youn.lt and your aaaut. Aiuaay journal. a A tavage tortures his enemies, civilised mas nla frlsnda. rjeasrally speaking, a man la per- nough his aldast daurht.r I. ia to do It. TOD.ka P.nlt.i a a AinJVo vnn s . A mnn will walk fjv mll.a un a mountalnalde and than go horse Sn5 k ck b' he elevator Isn't run-nln.-Phllad.W,la Tel.graph. Even when dinner Is waltlna- for I hem It takea aome , an u paaa u given point. ' . a I'robably In the Ufa of every hired man th.ia cornaa time wnn , fMg i 1 ,iT i: ' D" ,n Poeltlon . aalUd to run bis own household until tu fire the boas. To! ad Blade sT'"'"1 f -ruin) iiiiin.il Letters from the PcopIcT tprT" .... ,. .r ) m ( MuA a, Wfc aad Maa'a" Aaala. 1 a aHor af TW K tola Wwla I I read & latur from. "P. U. U." on Woman1 Work and Man's." The tatfrwAm auaaayiai tn eiaamtliYiai I hut !H--etrMat davotaa hsr apara time to af;i,aiSBeais ouuna id noma tna daoay VsTMia fasMly, aad henca of th race, ,Vr,sSt tdci while it la perfectly BT IBia awBnM lo ' wnx make aatl-auffraa aoaeehat ;SSM Sevjaa coiiaga." is It not equally MSjaws ina aoroa in comes sac. HI' aaal bvalaaaa latarasts or pro- ,i aaamiMMM com rirai ' in T way ia "r, at. u," so ajagrfajrl' kJtewe aaaamTal. m ta'aM'a sawrraaw. bhw all home duties? Titer ara number laaa caaea of women who have rarai famlllM and ba.n axoallant hoiiaa. wives while leaving thalr hnm7. volo or to make oooaalonal pi aaa auffrac. Uoturnns bav. b.n wrttl ieu io .now loai aunrago U not likely to engross a woman as is th bridge table. And bow about busirtasa woman, alone In tb world; or ohlld. las women living In plscaa whr thalr home reaponalbllltlaa ara nec. aarlly lasnedT 1 do not reel that "P. M. it." hia held out adaq.ua.te reason why women bav Mot a rlaat to a place and a vote la public af fair. Mac modern wemsa take m Interest la the Ufa around them. new a war mi an asts i m en me wwwji Sl( t, mmmmmmv, Wi CAPT. TTNNHrOTI.E waa eluci dating hla thaorlaa of Krleg- spiei, or tne war game, aa plsyad at the Uullet and Bayonet Club for th beverages, and with a hole box full of red, blue, black, white and yellow headed pins he had already begun to ahow how he could have crumpled up the Kaiser's other wing, when Mr. Jarr, lookjag up, exclaimed: "Th Boaal" The next minute Mr. Jarr had dorted away, only to be puraued by hla employer In hla roller-ohalr.' "Oh, dear I" whimpered Mrs. Jarr. "Clara Mudrldg-Hraltb, th cat! She aaw I saw bar with Jack Silver, and now ahe's told her husband that Mr. Jarr and I are here) What are THBY doing here? Mr. Jarr may be afraid old Smith may discharge him for being away from the office without leave, but I know too much about Clam Mudrldga-Hmlth for that to happen) Mr. Jarr might have eacaped frm his pursuing employer, but a press of rolling ohalrs obatrueted th way; and his boas, having hla dancing crutehea with him, reached out with one of, those handy social supports and hoiked Mr Jarr with the upper part of It. "Mr. Jarr, la this a loyal thing to doT" asked the boas, sorrowfully.! Mr. Jarr looked sullenly down at hla own tors and made no answer. You ahould have aald something to ro flrat," continued the boas. sent word to th ofBc," mum bled Mr. Jarr, "1 sent a telegram." Only that you were going to At lantic City," replied the boss. "Capt. Tynnefoyla Is liar, tool" "Well, a lot ef peopt are hare toe," retorted Mr, Jarr. "You ara here, your wife la here. Jack Silver la here. Why, ao many people I know are hare that 1 wouldn't be surprised to Uua and Blavtnsky, followed by th kUryver. th Bangles, th Haffertlaa and Toay th bootblack, eoma rolling along In puah chairs." "Tber ar other parsons In At lanttc City whoa names you do not mention!" said Mr. Jabei Smith slgntacantly. Mr. Jarr turned pal. H remam bared what Mrs. Jarr had told him of Bernard Blodger blng arrested for having th stolen Klaawy Kar In hi poaseaalon, He wondered hew th boas kaew of this, ea't be avastve, Mwara Jarr,' set aaa baa wtitY Hsllag. t Taeve hsjsj(i jy i sjsspsjsjp)y ttfVMi other Arms reduced expenses I didn't!" "But why ahould youT Our busl- neaa Is picking up fine," said Mr. Jarr. "No matter," replied the boas. "Look how many patrlotlo foreign employers give a hundred pounds to the War Fund for Tidies for Soldiers and then dlacbarg a thousand mn. Why, I didn't even reduce salaries in our establishment, did I?" Mr. Jarr was ao baited that he came near to saying It would be hard to rduo th salary he got, but ba had taot enough not to. And the boss, gaslng at him reproaohfulty, remarked: "Bo I aak you, why do you com to Atlantlo CHy to meet thee people, without at least advising me of the matter? I would have met their offer." "What do you mean?" asked Mr. Jarr. "Oh, do not try to pull the whole sale Wool over MY eyes," said the boss. "Don't I know that Dowllng Butts, our biggest competitor, la here? Don't I know Capt. Herbert Tynne foyle, who Isn't In the militia for his heaMh, Is her? Don't I know why you ar hero?" Mr. Jarr knew LUCK when he heard the rustle of her wings. "Well, what are you going to do about It?" he asked hoarsely. "I am going to take you and your wife to our hotel. We will get Tynne foyle to go to Europe and sell blank ets for US! We will make Dowllng sfwTsai"1rT-'l a aa aa ai l-rfyiVlfVYa ViVrVVirViViVVVWWIAftn Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Butts look like a bale of moth-eaten shoddy at a Sheriff's sale!. Whatever he's offered In salary and commissions I see and raise him. And by the way, my wlfo tells mo that Capt Tynnofoyle Is an awful flirt!" "Bo's Jack Sliver, my wife says!" retorted Mr. Jarr. Old man Smith chuckled. "Well," he aald, "Dowllng Butts has a nice looking wife. Let .them flirt with her!" Pop's Mutual Motor By Alma Woodward Th. fttM iubUhlaa 0. onj. 'Tttaasaaaxts OaprrUbt, 114, bt Th. met Publkhfcf Co. (Th. X. Xrk Etb1ii World). HAT a beautiful thing I OPTIMISM, oh my Daughter, and how sweet ar Ita uses tn a sad, sad world I For, verily, verily, It Is that sublime faith which causoth a man to believe that be ean crawl out of love as easily as he can fall Into it. Yea, It m that aweet credulity which maketh him to go right on propos ing to a damsel even after he hath doteoted a sign that she MAY accept him. It 1 that beautiful quality ot hope which tempteth a woman to marry a rasn In the delusion that she will keep him "straight" In the future, even though his past hath been a perfect "slg-sag." It Is that, triumph of hope over experience which caueeth a divorcee to marry a second time. And a woman to marry for "companionship." , ' Or ANYBODY to marry for "love." It Is that aweet sangulnlty which enableth parents to regard twins as "blessings." It Is that sustaining faith which prompteth a man to think that his wife will believe a "morning-after" story which soundeth too good to be true. It Is that undaunted lelf-oonfldence which insplreth a man to fancy that he can ateer safely through the shallow of love-making without foun dering on the rock ot matrimony or being caught in the whirlpool ot a breach of promise salt. It I that blind aslf-deluslon which maketh a one hundred aad twenty sound man to call a two hundred and twenty pound woman "Little One." It I that enviable quality ot aatleaee which enableth one man to en dure another maa'a iootaaoaea aad troablee wish perteot equanimity. Yea, It 1 that golden dream ot Alnaeeaar which maketh a damaal to beltevs that aha 1 a maa'a "trst love" or ale LAJrTI Vetilr. vartlr. he that loreta aaa woman at a Urn la a eeatlmeatallat: aa that loveta two wemea at a time la a fatalist! tat ae tit loreta. all at all times id aa ornMIIT. AM wwea af tajo waaM. je sVX rkuarUht- 1111.. lit .Vtw Tata gfiaf W ELL, to think that at last we're going to do things with our car that other people do," ejaoulated Ma with delight. "I never oould understand your aversion to night driving, Milton. All the sporty people do It." "Whon I was a sport I didn't have a car," observed Pop, with a dismal flourish. "That was years ago. And whon I WAS a sport I'd 'a made the modern lights look Ilk the last half of a 'sheltering arms for the aged.' am now a poor, effote, docreplt rem nant of a frollcker." "If any one else aald that about you I'd like to see what'd happen,1 remarked Ma. "Why, the other night when you tried the roull-roull with Mlaa Lawsonand one of tho men aald you'd do better if you had lass plaster ot Paris In your knees, dldn' you go und tell him that you dlsap proveu or mis loose uancingi "Now, If we atart discussing that.1 warned Pop, "there'll be a scrap. So what's the uio7 just tell me what I'm supposed to ao to-night. All want from you is common courtesy ana oiamea iitus oi mat." "Don't you get Impudent, Milton! cautioned Ma. "That remark Is net tker new nor funny. Mr. and Mrs, Carter will be ready at S.IO. Th affair beglna at 1U.JU. I think It1 lovely of them to ask us on their tickets. These out-of-town night aances are an ine rage, -tas Yew Tree inn' la tns name or the slaoe. Clualnt. Isn't It? And it takes only an hour to gt there, by motor. Ob, it's tne smart tnwg to ao, i assure your "Havana wrappers on a Connect! out base, I suppoa?" "Everyone '11 be In evening cloth u? that's w&at rou mean." Ma's dut, nlty was asserting itself. "Iv put out your eult and your white corded silk vast with th black mo I re piping aad your whit enamel and dJamoad huttona and rou "That'll do. Tou needn't list taa tortures. Ana rm suppose t arrr a ear traaaea up in tnese trappt "Drmag a ear aooan-t n wtttntT dirty at aJL Tamt'aa athamSsa amaaT Slogans of Success. By Hacen Conklin HALF a loaf Is better than none, but half a loafer Is better than a wholo one. MANY, a shining light la extln iniiahed for want of keeping up tho supply of fuel. MANY a for-tune ia composed of ' " ' THB man who can take the "feat" out of "defeat" frequently puts the "rise" In "surprise." WHEN you seo a man riding the horse of solf-sufflclcncy, with his feet In the stirrups of boastful ness, you can mako up your mind he'a riding for a fall. J The May Manton Fashions f lnrlrr1enyTYV' - ----- .a-aaaaaasM...(uJUUUU HERE HgC( Pattern No. 8479 Draped Negligee, email 34 or 30, Medium S3 or 40, Larg 48. or 44 bust. ere is a neg ligee of th rt for whioh evory woman the outlook. It tho protttost. becoming line means almost labor for tho mal and lb is perfe well adapted to lovely cotton terlttls that shown In such vat oty and to oti 1 slmplo fabrics well as to silks, the picture, a pret flowered cotton era Is trimmed with Vi lonclcnnes lace. gives a charmln color effect and ca bo laundered pi fectly. In the bael view, plain Ivor white orepo 1 banded with th) same material In oM blue. Flowered and plain silks can M' treated the easa way, or flowered chullls or plain 'wool. crepe. ,( For the medDaar' size, the negMSje wtli1 require 3 8-8 yds. Of1 material 57, z 7-s yd: 18, 3 1. yds. 44 lni wiae, witb 6 yds. 0 Insertion, S yds. o; edging. Psttern No. 47t out tn throe slses, mall H or It, sne-! dlum SS or 40, large. or . inones oos inl 3 meaaur. Stew a OMarn Xhaaa Saatsrss, I Call at THB BVBNTNO WORLD MAY MANTON FAsTHXOM rOBBAXJ, Doaald BuUdlng, 10 Wast TairtT-a.ooDS street (oeaxx sit XlUnbal Bros.), eorner Sixth avaooa and Tbirty.oona street, New Tors, or eent ny man oa reeaipt k ten casta la stamps for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT Write roar address Dial air ana alwan is wanted. Add two cents for latter posug If in a hurry. f0w n n n i-LfULnjuvJ everrshmg. To gtve the devUNhla due, vou really look sweet In evening dressT and there's no reason on earth why you shouldn't etp out ot that ear looklag Juat aa nioa and spotleas as tou did when you stepped In It" ateta-and.a-hsJ mlls from the marlem Wver aid adaa aag-ttoea. auautera mUee tram Tew Tm Urn, wheat tie mooa was ahlnUg MfUr ami asa nsOsra was haihad an tea atlver taiara was a earnxonanar rawors la sswejsmam aamsaa visasai i ly. Pop brought her to a full sto) All was moonlight, nature and silence rup oi out, wimoui uttering a BTM lable. Xe walked three steps, dnel r.lrth, and looked down upon a aman a roo long in tne leit front sho. A surry of the landaoagw dlaoloeed a garageless wast. . walked alonawlde and epoke e sar. ha man Who aald aaJ.h 9SLH39f!.V theagkta.maa j it. r fjS.Of3fSLvr-v,- ;-caaaiJ 'il-lt