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FEV Aikg World's Dells Magacine. Thursday. Janeary 91, 19073. Our Beautiful New York Climate. | ET TY°VINCENTS 2 ADVICE*LOVERS DON’T “KISS AND TELL.” hs By, fi : nds ing.” te PRN A MINGLE Me ts evening. Pemaree et ge Moris E By Maurice Ketten. . 69" Purilshed by the Press Publishing Company, No. Sto Park Row, New York tered at the Post-Office at Now York as Second-Class Xalt Netter, t | | = est tt | | “So T heard," answered his chum. “Also thet, “told her sho wasn't Ike other girls and Kissed her band when you went awny and sald you wished you" conta” it-m-case-of “from hand. to-mouth.'”* La Tho first man didn't call on Miso Blank again, ent, unless she reads’ this—eho wil continue to wonder. if f ‘The reason he never went back was pa his sane reottal] proved to him that Mias Blank belonged to tho class of girle who “Kise tell He, Uke other n didn’t care to have tity foollahty- sentimental =e and-his-attempt at Joye-making recited broadcast. i | 3f a man had told people that a qirl waa in loye with him and had repeated” her aweet, shy Little confidences, he would be justly ‘branded os a cad, Yor Such 1a the unjust advantage wae women haye—a girl who repeats such’ thing, _lescapen the conddmnation she deserves. But her punishment, at, last, {1 worge: [For men Mud out ter prociivities, anda ne Toot “Nees-to-hn-held—up-to-ridtealag they shun her. Fewer and fewer calla does she receive. Fewer and. fewer pros posals, She wonders why her moro reticent, !f less attractive, next-door nelgha \yor 18 so much more popular than-she. Let her read this and she will "4 an the number: actually arresied that the compilation made-by the Magistrates’ clerks understates rather than overstates the crime of the; ‘The total-number- of- arrests decreased 6,636-from-4905.t0-147,9- arrests -of-men increased -stightly, awhile the arrests of -women—de— a from 33,237 to 25,837. This came through a change in the! wlicy of making wholesale arrests in spectacular raids. Even-with this, thange there were enough such arrests to‘continue the profitableness of ; the professional bondsmen’s trade.” ee | Less. than ten per cent: of the arrests were for felony, and of, these | — ~ only. 1,444 for burglary and. ittle| more than a hundréd for all grades | of murder and manslaughter. i \ine-tenths of the arrests ‘for. “petiy ~ offenses—intoxication, | disorderly conduct, yiolation of a corporation’ ordinance, talking back ‘to a policeman, and the like. From all these petty cases, in which the ’ Magistraies -have-the-power-to-im— “ AGAIN. GIVE jto understand, | Ir more girls would learn to keop to themselves the secrets, ets, that ¥ linto thetr possession, men would «von acquire a much loftier {deal of womane | | hood. , $ i BR UN iy Pe “Peonfessed, shying whe —was—sorry_—eand~ Nineteen Loves Thirty-eight. would never dp sao again.T've conn) > Dear Betty: g y od, but AM a young lady “of nineteen and have been |keeplng company Wiar = She hasn't) been "WIth anyone xentleman almost twice my age. 1} since. We were engaged to bo, married: think @ great des! of him, and he say |}, Maron next. Shall T foraive her or he loves ms, but-he docs not take Mel st? 1 jove her dearly andfee]_timt-2— out_and only comes once in a walle. | couldn't live withaut her, E. B.C. | BUll every time he comes he tells me he| Hy alr Tress terete: pee Lou hae 7 Fait me} Made too-much-of a. smal Cr [loves me dearly, and does not WAht me} Tima s sour best 40 Induce her to: tell ‘ }to go with any one else. He ts very| you the truth always. : Sesoet | SJealous, but I can't seo why he does} Lnot-eome, He has the time, isa busi-| Her Pa and Ma Object. : ceply and affectionately in love, T es acti { 1 & pee ae ea Cea ; as aM Oro : : [neg man and could come whenever he| Dear Betty: ; vt ly $82,297. The arrests OW z ; jp ane ~— = { + ; AINCOAT: 4 . | young fellow who! lives felony and for the more serious R X Mists radial pint aay oe. and ma won't let me haye anything to” .|do with him tecauae he drinks an awful lot. What shall 1 ao7 1 ea't gtve him misdemeanors aré not triable by.a Police Magistrate, who can only hold "or Special Sessions. It thus appears that over a hundred thousand citizens of New York Shave been arrested, taken {oa Station-house, Tocked-up in: a-cell, usually } kept there all _night_sometimes clubbed and always injured in their busi- = Mess and social relations, if their standing is such that these can be in- jured“andall” iparatively trivial charges, for which a five-dotiar ‘fine is more than adequate penalty. SEEN = —___—No -distinction-is -made—between-these_petty—offenders—and—greater- sttiminals. —What difference there-isis in favor-of the-criminal of higher} degrée, who receives much more consideration from the police than. the ordinary -citizen-who-fails-to-move-on—when-he_js-told-or-has-presumed, to talk back or has taken too many drinks or’has driven his truck on 3 g-side-of_the-crossing, or-has done-any one of the other thou- fand.and one things for which the New York patrolman makes an arrest when he feels like It. a — It-would seem only proper that a distinction should be made In these | = ases. The violation of a corporation ordinance, often unintentional, is “no valid | for imprisonment before trial. In many of these cases i s would be effectual in bringing the accused to court. Also i ¢ases-of disorderly-conduct there should_be-some-reasonable-reguiations at least to define the present wide police discretion, | Wanted to. He will not go with any other girla. He likes to be conxed, but [1 am one of these girls that don’t coax. | -Ldou't_know.what to do. Please help | me. -He-ls refined and stands high. Every one knows that tin cares for me, but still ha does not come. > Don't you think my—love- for-hime. would make-bim swear. off aunking®, ENE He cal you very n So, I do not. It will simply rais Goes-not-want 10-908. you often. Ife ts} your Ife unless you K1Ve TC Up. : Junreasonable In his: demands, and I , | would 9 out with any one I pleased Candy at the Theatre. (if fT were you. z ye Dear—Bettr> — : “[78 it proper for a young man ve She Went with Another. | a Indy am box of candies at the” Rear tea Reed “theatre? I do not ese much of same;+- AM a young man twenty-seven and | am In Jove with a young Iddy nine- teen, Iam an engineer on a rall- road and. make a good oilary. I, | am deeply in love with this lady, and: ‘whe clatms that she loves me, but one ; day jaat year she went out with another | | gentleman while I was on my run, and ‘T heard about ft. “When 1 asked her especially at New York theatred. Algo! }4y-4t—proper -to—gat-the young. Jaay | rowers. on the way to call for her ta jogo to-a reception or ball? Ss A, MISSOURIAN, -—}-—Ft-1e-not-sonsidered proper to emt. candy-at-the-theatreYou shonid asi the young lady to supper at. restary x terweard ja-proper to 01 Ant_atterward, It {proper (0. ® s fobs daniel tt attest bat she? tre | found that I knéw it to be tras she” cumstances” you” miention= — Seeking the Right Woman « « « « « — By John Burton ama B atsetiois on: ise the worl Looking fore: women ety Talent ane. would; aver decarenrae once tari “THe Girl at the Candy Counter. ~ atinct told him she was somewhere. Ho hoped that she was waiting for him, and that he would find her before it was too late—before she married af-/an honest letter from an honest man. a Then one day ho received a square envelope, postmarked at Dayton, 0. The envelope: contained only one thing—an engraved card: “Mrs. James Thorne By Margaret Rohe. ther man, for instance. Bondurant found her in the most unexpected way. He was looking over an Slustrated newspaper. and he mw the girl in a photograph. It was a ploture of a | Peavely.” great outdoor picnic or garden party. There were hucdreds of figures in the pho-; That night in_his room he looked at her picture again—he had bought other! togreph, but Bondurant’s ideal stood oul so distinctly from_alt the others-that{coples of-the paper, and a sudden hopeful thought came to him. She could not ‘dhe could see only her, be married—clse nhe would-not have-sent her card. = Gho was a tall, slender gir!, and she carried a tray on which were some mall; ‘Then who was Mrs. James Thorne Peayely? Her mother, perhaps, or her & ishes—he was unable to tell, even with his microscope, whether they were cups | unt, or some trusted woman friend whe might Introduce them. of tea or Httlo plates of tee cream. On wecond thought Bondurant was delirhted to know that his seal girl had —quently-t-results in-a-severe clubbing and sometimes maming for life— F penalty unkn to the present Penal Code : er “He studied the photograph and smoked and dreamed until fae in the night.| sent him the name of a woman frietl or,relillve Instead of her own name. It 5 *| $4e learned from the caption below the picture that the big garden party was | sHowed x modesty art good pense that-was worthy of even her, e Lack of system and distorted discretion are two of the results from [aven by a-socloty at Dayton, O, It was a fatr infcrenco that the girl lived there. | — Bondurant went to Dayton the next moming. He had no diMoulty In-Anding—f- ___Bondurant’s impulse was to pack his suit case and set out for Dayton on 6 | Mra.-James—Thorae-Te. She was-n-middie-aged woman of seyere and r- the—Improper attitude of the police force toward the people There | rojtowing morning. Then nether idea came to him. i mpectable aspect. She lstened patlently to hia story, acd then she sald: {should be a uniformity of rules and rulings which a conference between | He careruity cut the photogrephof-t8lk_ girl from_the_@voup_and=pasted-tt|— “It -you-wiit-dinewith-ve_to-night, Mr. Bondurant 1 will be glad to hava you ‘thie Police Magistrates and the Police Com 'wpon at envelops Then below the figure he wrote the address, “Dayton 0." In| aéet my husband-and-my daughter” ee —— ) missioner could bring about. | the upper left-hand corner of the envatope he Inscribed this: “It -pscty cannot-be}——It-was_a_conyentfonal dinner and a most-conventional meeting between the in result_would be a_simplifying of police processes, a relief of the | found kindly return to Hugh Bondurant, — Duflding, Chicago, TU.” man and the maid. He reailzed at once that was all ho had dreamed and : % m1 do week at Yale not long ago. All WM Courts from 4 ‘Thea he wrote her a tetter, as calmly aa he vould write Jn his present state| more. But she recelved him with indifference, almost hostility. He had found nior promena UNNECESSATY and-a greater sense of jus-| of emotional confusion, He used his business letter-head to show that he was ther, but she would have to be won, acd he sot hitnself seriously and happty to, friends of the students went to New Haven for the dances and things, And what, “dee $0 lacking in both the civil and crimi ‘lations not an adventurer.” Fe tola the unknown gtri-piainly-that-he-hed-been-looking |.the task. {came off? Simply this. “Twelve humired boys, who ought to haye ben playing “City Government as peoples Byard comanal reations Of the | ioc ner all his life, and that-he wae sure ahe represented his Ideat-of all that war] In the end Bondurant won. He says the right womin Iw Wilting for every |'the parties of-thesecendpart.in.o apanking.special, lined upon each. aide of Jovely end dostrable in womanhood. He told her his-egp-sndhis_biminess connes man if he fe only fortunate enough to Mnd her.-From the Chicago Tribune. the-campus-down which the girls had to pans, ogled thein, made lo: Letters from the People. - Candy Counter, musingly, “and that hasn't been) more than a hundred and olght years ago at the” outside, we used to get marks on our montlily report for deportment. I suppose deportment doesn't count in these days,-eh?" Sys "Winj. (think ¢he syatem Jo still in effect,” ular Eighty-Cenja-a-Pound Curtomer. *Whyt" “They've flagged-1t-at-¥. think Ite gyre the dear Hitte—toys_a—_tatr_start int world to send them out without any instruction: ners.”” F ~On;! /enid—the--Regular Customer, ‘college men. ate sidered rathor pollsied, arert-theyt*———— ten, maid the Girl, They had what AN I was going to school,” sald the Girt at tbe ‘Technically, talking back to a pollceman ls not a caime; yet fre- prarks>and-ali-sorts of-offensive demonstrations. Now, of course, the boys ie 4to-blame,-They had never! Wad aay proper bringing up, or they wouldme Ihave insulted young women. That wasn't thelr fault, IC was Wie fault oft The z Cheerful ~ I | Imer. . Je ae _ PJ By C. V. Kables. Fave fe, originaity, But later it Wna the fault of the college authorle _ Z z = }Gee oT here atenutd-he-2-course-in-deportment for euch Insolent young mashorgs The professor of this course should explain to his pupils Uiat It tan'texacuy es 2 to stare at women and obs = ee e = : a : —— a ~gentiemanly-thing for a-mob_of male crest ae = — ——— 4 rea — — — 4, X : ary i avon o, 9, boy o sil ‘Bditer of The Evening Worldt fhey were only outdoors because they | Reeth aa the boya say! asked Wie Regular Cistomer, ij ae iecos one aL Rant aasona yireet | Seg es ee Oe Oren i Z ; =f — ey | Oh auch thine ax “Gee, ain't she a_peach?-—“That blonde:tn-sreen-can-malke to Grand Central station to-day. How] terea punch of patrons, but no mare my _window-cuahlon hat one ji the wills sweaters ‘queen ota that-for speed? -Twenty-alx minutes! san jn -altimors. or Dubuque. eerie ‘And talk like (het. It-reminded-me-of-ruaning the gauntlet on Broadway on @-— Bridge “to” Seventy: treet! ” -e t- ie . aS 4 oy abi canara had as ‘alintght,“ madly gay, pleaxire : $ “ ae jen vuid the Regular -Wighty-Ceats.a-Pound Customer, “that_waen- La nig ais oe :Fudget Another bubble ‘burst! | _ ~ < z Re | jyptended for-tmpertinence-that was admiration. Doesnt a girl tke a : slows re ae = table, decent and early = rs : > = ™ ‘jon say fattering-things_about her?” _ = a ‘proving that expfeanen aro almost never ["°Ore «= we Sfe out in the tell grees, . % ae x = : 2 : (gne certainly does,-sald- the Girl_al the Candy Counter, “Dut ax seen 5 Tun at full speed. And how can they? SPRING FIELDIMAN, SS : St | yule' she would prefer to have the twelve hundred different men pay her the i If they did’ they'd soon be banked four The Horse's Blanket. pliments at twelve hundred different times. Z ——teep-at-the-Grand—Central_Why not | 75 me_pottor-of Tas Eventny World ' “He Is Serving on the Jury.” use both uptown and downtown express I would lke to say a few words to By Walter A. Sinclair. Taeks—during rush “hours tor—trains} Animals" Frieod.” I drive horses with= AMMA, tell me where {s papa?” once remarked a little «mala f/ | com: 7 going Inthe “rush direction? So few! oq. biankats- and cover them when T people are going In the opposite dl-|grop 1 don't think a horse should be rection at that time that the eatest covered. while working any more than food to the greatest number’ rule/a man wearing a coat while ‘working. ‘would surely apply. G. FERRIS. | Give the horse the coat while standing | See the TROLLEY CAR: wi > D Information zon jones 121, City a the man the coat while driving. | The Fat Man is Chas-ing the Tro “M ‘An upon her little plilow her gold-plated head was laid. rectory. {If @ man alta on the blankets he. don't = ; "Mh ithe Bdttor of The Evening World! do so to harm the horse and If hal in od Then the mother grasped her corsage, as all drama ¥ ‘And she whispered, “Pray, my darling, they will send him back»: He is guarded by a Jailer, whoa constant watch will keop ane ‘Ag he eats his frugal dinner and endures his guarded sleep. He reads openwork newspapers, slashed with spaces deep and wite.” “}amma, 1s my pa in Russia?” ‘Then the mother softly cried X would like to know {f there is any ang snow give It a good wetting it ts weak published and where it can be,a barden to drive with {t on the horse obtained- containing a-tist-of-the plers Rea} Animal Friend, GOHDA on East and North Rivers, giving the name of the railroad’ occvpying each | pler and a number and location of such. | To whe Est Any Music Publisher Will Tell You, | of The Evening World; _#E. & FooWhat haye I to do to try and popu-| THIS CAR In The World Almanue, eit el popes (i plob ATunaNe ear For __ | = : CHORUS, Se ee ma Se eerie: Rega Fes ren WoUIaE ks to z know cebetels REPAIR. SHOP. 4 Fan : “He ts serving on the fury, they have taken Mm awoy. j tie cost ot having them copyrighted. | and if much a t falendar that will-tell mo the days of Ctmnot ‘be Drought. before. the. pablte is weok on whieh Certain “date: tell without being copyrighted. Of course, mi past Years? Mra, G. PA N. + | J have not the slightest idea of how to Net An “AILNighe City, | wo about tt. Miss DAViS. Ty the Editor of The Evenings World: | Passles tn Ets Tam here on a trip, 1 have often! nh Vil td TR read of New. York being an “all-night eity.” with ‘Its streets as gay ahd crowded at night as in day time, started out at midnight the, other even- “dng to witness this wondes tor myself, You necd-not expect your papa -till-a-very distant day. AIL thes he'a had to sever, He may rejurn here necer, ‘Although'he’s not accused of any ortma, ‘Neath lock and key they'tt hold him TI whiskers white enfold him, * He's serving on the fury, and it's much Uke serving the,” ro can I find a ready reference T) the Editor of The E Here are nome for your readers, | the English langui ning World: mological problems Vhat four words in (Many years have passed since daughter pestered darling mamma go, it eeilend integer: ‘And upon the mother's colffure Father Time has lafd the snow, ‘i Utwo adverbs end fn vom?" What wt *: Though the hair-dye makes {t spotty, like the kind of snow thatéae © i in the Engitah language contains f 5 ; 7 << See upon Manhattan's highways, thanks to noble D. 8. 0, Ya Tomerwibout one person to the block | (with phe exception of the seml:vowel Zoe s é Gnd the side atreots were durk- ant | «yy all the voweln in the alphaber ta — ‘ ‘Then in walked a Rip Van Winkle, mossy faced and slow of-tread, empty. Everybody ashkep. In the thelr proper order? Now, then, bright 2 : yes,the Fat Man Ca ght And she recognized her pa, of whom her mamma once had saldy ¥ @erloin I found a few mere people | igh school pupils! but very few at that. They COLUMBIA BENIOR. HeGet On it7 ASK Hi > |e Mita ta, serving on the Jury,” 0,