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ci i TL EIT The Evening World Daily Magazine, ihursday, june 4, 1908. 9-009-9009000000000003) ! | peo oer | ae i Gertrude Barnum’s | | ——] i Talks to Girls. Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to © Park Row, New York. ,. J. ANGUS BITAW, See.-Preas ree nt stom, 48 Wares PULITZER, cond-Class Mail Matter, ame w Entered at the Post-Office at New York a: Ottilie’s Garden. were attending @ moonlight “lawn party" in Ottite'e back yard, Which bloomed ga with roses, Iles, W dutty. 1 pretty maids all in a row It was a wonderful surprise, (his German gar tucked away ina fo: other ef Mana ing, lowering te walls. A bit o @ubscription Rates w The Evening For England and the Continent and ‘World for the United States | ‘All Countries in the International Canada, Pestal Union. own dillys VOLUME 48. ..NO, 17,089, behind Idealism wileh had HUNGRY CHILDREN. ent pod @ half century's threats and te tions, sending forth its delicate shoots, spring after spring, to belie tho N two of the East Side school dis- hardening cyniciam and sordid degeneracy of the enciroling tricts th 500 child ii and encroaching city! And the loveliest flower of the lovely icts there are 500 chikiren starving garden was Ottilie hersel!, bending her flaxen head and slim, and thousands of others half fed. = supple body over a pansy bed or bank of geraniums as she 1 . = selected nosegays for xuests! The children ome 10 school ZA _— On an ornate iron bench, under @ willow tree, sat her breakfastless. At noon some of them = GEerRUOE BAPAUM wiiite-hatrod fat & cobblar who vd the tyranny of the factory system, steutly mat ne bis independent have crackers and milk which the teachers pay for. In the evening they go back to their hungry homes. Some eat scraps from gar- bage cans. Some: of these children will die of starvation. Hundreds of others will fall early victims to disease which their unnourished condition has invited. | Why should a child go hungry in New York or anywhere else in the United States? There is plenty of food. Within fifty miles there are vegetables ig® by teaching nd eking out the day's earn shop and individualistic philosop the violin at night. A half dozen of his pupils were now lovingly gTouped about him as he played melodious bits from Rubinstein, bert and umanon. “Isn't it like a fairy tale!’ exclatmed Stelia, romantically fastening @ rose in yO But Stella Ignored the Interruption and co: “Loan just imagine that Ottille is a fairy queen, She merely waves a FoMem wand. and jo! 1 the ifttle gnomes bound out from a hollow tree and begin to make the colunibine grow! | “And I can just tell you,”’ Insisted Kana, “that Ottilie's golden wand was an Spade, and her ten fingers were the gnomes that did t grubbding. Colum- bine would never grew If e dn't get right down to business, in spite of mos- quitoes and darning needles, and plant seeds, root weeds, fight worme and me- | “It's better than that.” sald B “It's the real thing.” | te the watering can at's more iike it,” sighed Ottilie, “And this year the terrible rains washed up most of the first seeds, and we had to piant again, It was an awfully late «. i Open rene Att Py & chil- | spring—certainly dia louk as though nothing was ever going to begin to come out. * svasting through lack of pickers and purchasers, while thousands of chil-| ; “But you stuck at It, and {t came out all right.” Bdna was growing more dren within a mile of the City Hall are hungry. | solemn every m! 7 oy 5 é | After the little German cakes and homemade cider had been circulated, and Surely there is something wrong. : § 3 : the old people had cordially delivered their parting blessings, we went bumping The wrong is the middleman system, which makes its profits through | 2 car through the flashing conmerctaliam of keeping down the prices the pro- iD Ca culls cits dless, with a rapt expression on her, ducer receives and raising the prices | ‘or your thoughts the consumer pays. was encouraging tt all was. Tve ) , y. It ree. the girls would never under- Farmers have sold their cows and at the movemen {f we'll only just qui gone out of the dairy business be- : HuBey Louie ae and pur own jads—Just mate cause they could not average more ning, of ore's always | than three cents a quart for milk ve frosts and bugs and worms to fight, and pesky, stinging, buzzing things } a "| you're best. Rut if we'll only stick at and the high prices of feed and cost- begin to bloom, for fair, just like Ot- { ly, inefficient labor made milk pro- { 5 © $o-—— —____- duction unprofitable. Bb: F oy ) ° { ‘eed is high because J. Ogden t f : : fi enections of a Bachelor irl. hy ‘Armour, 2 man named Patten and | he one or two other big Chicago gam- | | By Helen Rowland rs blers have successfully put through a corner in wheat, corn and oats. | > tae ; ‘ : AKOTA ts State that cuts a woman's troubles mm { Out of the profits they foundéd a $150,000 library and kept the rest. D f—ar ly takes away the better naif. It The parents of these starving chiliren are mostly garment workers 5 lege boys Are addicted to cigarettes and flirta- { rs . 3 "i tions, bachelors to cigars and s thearts: it takes = | who make suits, dresses, underclothes and other necessiti@s which the Fea Gee ice He ne pale cel J taxoalease, | farmers and truckmen would be glad to buy for themselves and their pipe or a wife +} families. Marriage is the “comme: t exercise’ at which we t i “5 a ‘ 3 , 4 take our diplomas love; th like the college G | i The East Side tailor is unable to exchange his labor for meat because | uate, we begin to rea hee ie ni Uabcat ne ae i the meat that the farmer gets 4 or 414 cents a pound for goes, It must be awful to live wit you have re- Vt through a commission man, the stock yards trust, the beef trust, a whole-| nim cae he has vecome so superlatively good that | salers’ combination and a retailers’ association before it is offered at 16 to} et x | hen a girl ma use he fs t can do it 18 the irc yy are ill-mated. fate to have him blame If the farmer got 16 cents a pound he could buy four times as many clothes, ‘Are Men More Honest Than Women Regarding Small Sins ? SIalube) aivorees ace fount) Foetueny the yasuine, Journey dus an Balt ice Indigestion is founded on If the starving children’s parents made four times as many clothes they could afford to buy meat. Perhaps; but Mr. Jarr Makes a Mistake by Mentioning It!..!.0.°° "" Whi 111 fiey do In taking umbrellas, that don't belong) to jay." SE arta them?" queried Mr. Jerr. “Oh, dear me! How good we are getting all of By Roy L. McCardell. | “Tt isn't #0 easy on the subway.” sald Mrs. Jarr./a sudden!” said Mrs, Jarr. “L suppose I'm not Ggeqre HEY ace putting "Thou “of course, if have the ehiluren with me, or felands, Honest, then, when I get on @ street car and the The Work of an Astronomer. I Salt sigM$ one can send them in past the ticket chopper nnd conductor dosen't ask for my fare and I forget to In th cl only drop a couple of Uckets in the box. The chop- |give tt to him?" By William W. Campbell. that they seldom If ever notice tt. "Do you realy forget?” asked Mr. Jarr. "I notice ray conductors know you that when the conductor takes a quarter or a half ‘ id your fare is that they notice you when dollar from a enger and says ‘I'll bring you the! ston the car. If the conductor's back is turned change after I've colle through,’ thar no one a get in, and {f uo sitp into a seat without forgets to remind him should he forget it.” charm in @ silk bag isn't in it with personal charm ip a atic e's heart {s touched st makes a hollow sound. + said Mr. Jarr, looking up from paper. (Director of Lick Observatory.) a quid or gas temperatures are high or relatvely low, we should begin by to steal s! asked Mr ne kind rn the nature of the stars, whether they are solid, us, whether they are new or comparatively old, whether > we wo “They are not of art I'd care to frame for my ou, you That's why I never Yh, I dare say that men are very houest—wh ‘ ‘ 1 | ane eioralc(reathca “ sa matter of five « wyaid Mea, arr," < IRON OEE SSnLUCY OE Ouro ND ier gut mans, Wb itea tne any, stati neay } ie th it?” asked Mr. Jarr. Wane ¥ : & enouga to present a disk, and therefore to let us study it in some j Raaactoee All other stars ain cs points of light even when the powerful ( tem three-thousandfold, writes the Lick Observatory direc 1 Review. There are observatorie for the without his "1 ara flushed and breath- if the conductor doesn’ ers that their fares the | 25 cents a pound to the consumer. | 1 | i { | | establishe | OVS Gaaecem ~mpany, and they also tel w you have just got on the going to muke myself conspicuous by ig him sole purpose of investigating the sun, and many astronom are constantly | prconducloralithate whe ‘ RouluiaieniG easy to the end of the car to give him five cen emp in studying the structure of all its visible portions, the laws followed | John D. Rockefeller has organized in the Standard Oil Company fall to ring up fa are stealing from th aaa s ier eeriata ae Copan has put o the \vell, there's ro use getting mad about sald by the heat and lght radiated from all parts of its surface, and’the conditions ° ya signs for,” said Mr. Jarr. ‘They jog the consclences Mr. Jarr, “and speuking about carfare reminds me ‘i . fh re ‘ stenicient a 33 ‘ | indicated by the spectrum of each part. It {= not too much to say that | the most efficient and economical s: Mrs. Jarr, ‘It’s as bad as that old of the passengers. lasers banittiolenort tocaayil ne velsoulectiaVanlia nities y that our T physical knowledge of the siars would to-day bo almost a blank if we hed been on are go fond of | U2Able to approach them through the study of our sun, Several of the most interesting portioms of our sun are invisible, except at times of solar eclipse. em of distribution Known in the © span: world, only he keeps the profits of it for himself ti Armour, Swifl, Morris a 1 can let me have?" “Go to the street car company y where they keep wait for a train, | come into the station they my conscience jogged," sald Mrs. for Willie now and I en when it dos the rest organized in th shout at you, ‘Step Hy 1 always ask them w ince he was born. So if|/and accuse me of robbing." said Mrs. Jarr hotly. most efficient and economical system of pr don't they run thelr trains lively, and one of these cre when he ntares at mp,|"Maybe it will lend you adollar, seeing that you are Our knowledge of the sun will be incomplete until these portions are thoroughly | Pe Ory as WEST ke ° 1 a door on me ae I was getting in as 4 e paid my fare!" ie ft my faultit/so worked up over the way I steal from it!” understood; and this is the reason why eclipse expeditions are despatched, at | they did this for their o1 1 : y dress" |i conductor don't ask me for my nickel?” And Mr, Jarr sadly realized he had been tactless great expense of time und money, to cocupy stations within the narrow shadow } > Carnegie built a great systen r ine steel. iro ny wonder why: at peopie think it no more| “Yes, !t ts." snid M rr. ‘It's dishonest not to)in his remarks. Kind words are more than coronets, belts in whatever corners of the earth these events oocur. +s share Cee: PUTS Ee SG) lt CAINS gC), fea etna) Oe a npany out of a fare than offer vour fara to ‘he conductor, Just as the signs| when you're going to “touch"’ your wife for a loan. Jee ee EY fe hi i harm to beat a coke which made him rich harm a in the distributing of sops to the public in the : aerate Bate ine ¢ eller an shoo “vie Reddy the Rooter. “$- She better How much By George Hopf} How to Reach the Age of 105. By Miss Ann Graham, Who Is That Old. form of unive: he on these tay re 1M GOING OUT TO GEE} DE BOSS LEFT HIS REAT SCOTT, REOOY RECIPE for attaining @ ripe old age is given by Miss Ann Graham, of ay ic oTa Cm CUTaT OW SUS CD CET Nepealivetvosm crane Norwich, Conn, with great appropriateness, for she is the oldest women to the eine IT_AN! SEE WOT HAPPENS! y }limPorTANT PAPERS Cae ee ee oe ESR RUS ater ME eT 4 : ; Bry according to Leslie's Weekly, 1s “do plenty of hard work, go to bed : \ ALE MM AVERVOUISEENIIT. arly, consider carefully what you eat.” The dally routine of thia cen- tenarian {s of interest. x ofolook in the morning, An hour later who cate a hearty breakfa to the reading of the New Testament by her nurse; after which she takes a nap for an hour, She eats her moat sub- stantial meal at noon, Then she has another nap and at five o'clock she partakes of toast and tea, An hour later she gocs to bed and sleeps the round of the clock. Misa Graham's hearing and eyenight are excellent, and ahe ta 4 most ina teresting talker concerning the eventa of her long life, Letters from the People. — To the Paitor of The I would lke ex @iscuss whethe: te the better care eighteen years old he arn | The ‘‘Fudge’”’ Idiotorial, Woe call upon Belmont to Re ' organize his Penny-in-the-Slog , Machine Service. As now oper ated the machines are CROOKe ED, Oniy yesterday we tapped one at the Eridge Station and got NO GUM! The man who came next pulk ed out a chunk of Gum and OUR CENT, He LOOKED like TOM RYANI iu Is not RIGHT that OUR CEN should go to a man whe ‘ Old Sol's Work, OH! You FouNnoD IT. You NOBLE YourH}| EE-YAH ( i Ren Eae HOW CAN 4 REWARD You?WHATEVER|||GO AFTER IM ILL SEE IF 1 EER SIEEAIE: = YOU DESIRE. My Son} HE'Lt POUND Honest date Mt le , met a te Machines. |) copyret, 1008 by we Hianet Fun, Co r of n Women in Business One Idea for Water Supply 1 think 4 2 1ooks ke TOM RYAN. It is not r.ght that GUM should not fole ; ae G Oca Cyt: - low the Cent. * é - : fe Ss = ——— = Mr. Eelinont POSES as a great Public Benefactor, while fim: The Merry Widew ie as : Bs ‘the Hubby Was No Loss. From Fish-Hook to Fireside, Slot Mach nes refuse to give up, or give up to the wrong man, MAU ee ae tec aa . ' f HOWL You don't appear very deapondent over your Mishand'a|~p gOLLAND bes eet engineers to work to pump out the water of the tamove| If the Public Sery! ¢ Commission was on its JOB it woutg | \