Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PENCE date oe * Publishea Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 83 to 68 yy, Park Row, New York. or SF PCSEP I! PULITZER, Pree., 1 East 124 bireet J. ANGUS FNQW, fee.-Tiges., 101 West 118th Strot. s | } Bntered at the Post-OMce at New York as Secor Bubscription Rates to The Evening World for the United States COME TO sh (TELL YOU! THE BALL CANT! GOT GAME wiTH|€ U5, SMITH! WITH THE wire! HREE THOUSAND girls danced on Monday on the grass west of the Mall in Centrat Park. That is what the grass is and should be for. Some people say that the purpose of the Central Park lawns is to be gazed upon from a carriage or auto- mobile. That is not right. The parks are and should be for the children of New York. ase The man who owns a horse or an ~~ auitomobile can take himself out to real country every afternoon and any Sunday. He can go where the grows spontaneously, where the trees were planted by nature, where sky is clean of smoke and where the birds are singing in the leaves he will only listen-to them. Except for a short vacation perlod few children of New York see or trees except when they go to a park. Their tender little feet not know the sensation of springing turf if the “Keep Off the ors are enforced, \ There are more children in Greater New York than the whole popu- ion of Philadelphia. Most of these children live in the same house twith a dozen other families. The future population of this city will not me from the big single houses on Fifth avenue, where the birth rate less than the death rate, but from the tenement-houses, where the chil- mn are born more rapidly than their elders fill the cemeteries. if = Ge A ca f{SOMITH, WITH ALL al HOME, AND WHAT | The school girls who danced in the park are the mothers of the fu- ; ‘ture. Their health decides the future health of this city. Their brains | Mdecide the intelligence of the men of coming generations. Their morals wy vtwill be the guide to the morals of the future. Nothing is too good for them. There should be more play grounds for the ¢!. The fifty-seven school sites which the clty has bor E and does not use should be made into attractive play grounds. All the parks should be thrown open that the children may be joyous when they 7 The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, | Home, Sweet Home. (Please Note Smith’s Great Will Power Never Fails.) " 1 We GO SHOPPING) | WONDER WHAT SMITH 1S DOING HAVE WE } By Gene Carr. SMITH HAS GREAT WILL POWER, OONT HEY, OER DRINKS! | NO. 3 head. Brown BARGAIN COUNTER —~2 Exploits in the Civil War. |) THE COMFORTS OF A Difficulties as President #ean} because the days of possible joyousness are too few as it fs. This is not a plea for more political real estate speculations like * ’ Rie ’ , | Skissena, Hunt's Point and Hamilton Parks. What the children want is 9) Gives QO (© h ana Mh ge ; place within distance of their c tty Vin cent LISS n ourts ip a rria ~ ‘ : SN NNN S FN KKK KKK KN NON NNN eS Oe SN Ree wwe s jhomes that they can walk to, not hiniles away. And what the children need pres is a real playground—not an hibition place or a gymnasium or drilling ground, but some accessi- {ble spot where they can play the feames which every generation of if gehildren myste y inherit; where hey can dig in the ground, roll in ¢ grass, make earth hills and forts mud pies; where, in short, they in be simple lienable | a yean Tc ill? | Has Two Suitors. i PES hot ot ot ot Ot otk St tO St EF Et ES SLL GSM KTS KAS SA ALA SSS SSS LSA AK KK SILAS ISIS Ks ¢ this love, as Iam for ing numbers ff he reatly C8 vi au Telephon: ter Again. Dear Be VE Y thne | riticism and ad The Story of The Presidents —RUTHERVORD BIRCHARD HAYES, Nineteenth President (1822-1893), tall y built, high, broad foree hair and line nos¢é, bushy brows. Study law six hours, in 1843, laid out this hours each day d Birchard father was 1822, been public Ruthe hour day” a stand- hy votes s gene dise ~ may obtained on application of this ser “The Evening World Reflections of A Bacnelar Girl. by Helen kKowlani a plece of her When a eving his wile nts, he forgets s man- ; PS | Letters from the Peopls wait ua i 60 oY 1 a some woman com vgled up that he has to } is A Money Mudate, It IScin irc re cmerall 2 Tapa a % ee RRLEN ROWEAND When the witehes on * eth’ spoke of “Double, is ble, toll and trouble,” they must have meant twins, [fo the Paitor of The Brening Wor'd @ month and keep. In a year or d e4y> 7 double, toll ana trou t ve mean J Here ta a financial puzzle tor readers! 4 he or whe would Le able to settle ead y e ooter. -$- Ben | ae “S- By ( eorge Hopf! T love you" ts just toreesvord , but it Is big enough te Fito discuss: A and B are man and wite in the aforesaid manner and te J ee stick in a strong mo and éhoke } JC ts sister to B. Now A wants @ loa. ment for the balance 3 , = aaa —_—__— ——y —-- A bachelor always looks upon his 9 love affairs as narrow escapes; an set 310 from ©. C gete the sum fro: OY, SOME Good HURRY REDDY HE MAY B : AN Wiig eet i ost opportimities D and passes menGBlents passes | 7] peal AER (EE ANY MINUTES M C Tareas oes’ ner ee Sah its is sometimes the bald spot on t ‘ {it to A. Now, who ts to pay D the $100” ,U JE IL =n The Ch spore nee: AL ee Bere) | HB told C not to give B the $100 ¥ it wae - YUL HUSTLE not C ao DR One View of the Case. To the Editor of The Bvening World: An automobile owner holding real es-|*pondent a tate 1s arrested; $109 cash ball accepted; | UP his sea: fine $15. A chauffeur holding no reat | bad done not money. net from Your corre- » would give © probably t dress and at the ‘What ‘9 the answer, readers? GASOLINE Chances in the Country. Fo the Editor of the Evening World: | ‘here are in many parts of the world | "Pndent fe no womon care to hi has done @ lon: |serves no more lor nis ewn sex kind of chilaai “(for instance, in the United Stat Mexico and Cuba) places whe: can be had at very reasonable ‘The land in Ouba, for instance, is fertile and something {s growing a! me. It oan often be had for $25 an! cre. A $10 tent or a hut will prove t gufficient to live in the vear around (AM implements needed would be valued a real man evinc LIKE GREASED— Ww a mal Canned AN' FATTEN UP YouR. who has been tirown over alway Ballots. hinds on his knees to The ‘‘Fudge’’ Idiotorial. | We ate always having trouble | with the POPULAR VOTE, First Our ‘we spend a BARREL trying te 4 get Votes INTO the BALLOT BOXES, and then we have to spend ANOTHER BARRE« to GET THEM OUT, at about %. A few dollars’ worth of | caus: (vegetable sex! will also be necessary to teain with The frst crop will be gathered in about two months. Then @here could be planted orange, ¢ a: Hut and other nut trees, bananas, p: al apples, Nes, &e., and in a comparatively 4 ,few years one acre would be worth t Glpoo. Counting it al! together s100 ought ot b Manhatt Q hy 4 rear one who is not too young or too avenue, . ; yestate 's arrested; §100 cash bail re-| at and ope fused; real estate bail required; fine $6, |matinees). B: d 4 | fo be sufficient to make a good start./ptal, Sixty-fourth street. Bar Nospitats, Eye and iar an Eye, Bar and Throw Beoond arg lospita » Rear Teint rk Eye and War In : Copymt, 1908, by the Planet Pub. Co Everything goes contrariwise BATTIN’ AVERAGE 62) |) |_—____PF_ with us, if the COURT does not 7 ACT pretty soon we shall tackle the Ballot Boxes with a CAN- A, | OPENER! } What will our Little “MAYOR” Think of That? it We have about made up our mind that AFLER THIS we ° i shall run our ballots Pirectly into the BOX from a Rotary PRESS. 4 This will save a lot of expensive PRELIMINARIES and INSURE our ELECTION! } The Dependent League has indorsed The Rotary Press Ballot g. ‘and: Tho Gan-Opener idea, This-makes+Itvas:GOOD: ©