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ieee ree te The Evening World Glorld, | Pumened Daily Bxcept Sunday by the Press Publishing Cempany, Nos, 68 te @ Park Rew, New York. {MOREA PULITZER, Pres, 1 Rast 14 ftrwwt, J. ANGUS SIAM, Hee. reas, itt Wart 112 Broek Office at New York as Second-Ciass Ma!l Matter. The Day of Rest. Ey Maurice Kette~-., 0 You Sweet = (MADE SOME NICE BisculTS For Your AREN'T THEY Good Entered at the P SUNDAY BREAKFAST UTTLE REALLY ti for Enel 4 the Continent and AS { HN? = D eee anid forthe, Cal Pau counties in thet ternational >} WIFEY me ooh DELICious! One Yenr #8 EXPERT IS A One Month. : VOLUME NO, 17,185, | "ON THE SKIRTS OF POLITICS. ? the end of the old Brooklyn Bridge work has been going on for some time on the subway connections over which the new municipal build- ing is to stand, The bills for the land are now coming in, amounting i so far to some $8,000,000, \ Lr In this case of the claims the Sire brothers are an illustration of the way the city is muleted on land 49 an aes DID You EAT, DARLING = pur , BAI : Before the terminal site was an- Teo or Ley Geeot lh NY) nounced to the public somebodies, IN A MINUTE LITTLE Pig! ) Salt LON | not necessarily mind readers, knew Guene SoneRe Wl idge De ‘2 NAT AWFUL what the Bridge Department and » ant HOEY the Board of Estimate would do. rs 64 / ) WaT HINSTCOrreyE! | Among the somebodies were the Sire brothers. Before the property “owners knew for certain that their property would be taken the Sires had ta lot of dummies buy it. These dummies mortgaged the property to } ‘other dummies until the mortgages alone amounted to more than the 4 purchase price. q i Workmen, scrubwomen and other employees appeared as property b } i ‘i ] owners and mortgages, | I? f | Most of the buildings on Chambers and Reade streets, City Hall RS) ( Place and Park Row which were to be acquired for the bridge terminals \ \\, \\ p f 4 had little value. They were old and the rentals were not profitable. i The only likely purchaser was the city, and whether the city would pur- | schase depended upon the kind of terminal pl The Sire brothers belong to that class of New York's citizens who make a profitable living on the outskirts of y are never “tandidates for office. They do not go to conver or take part in “primaries, But whenever there is anything going on like what George “Washington Plunkitt called honest graft know how to raise the emoney to handle the job, and they take care that their share in the | Profits shall he | an WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY THROWING THESE DTONES ATUS FROM THE WIN DOW 2, TURN Now. \ YOu WRETCH| ‘ / Children Are Disgustingly Like Grown People, Aren’t They? G : : ] Mr. Jarr Fails to Draw a Moral From This Interesting Fact t Men lixe these are t the barrooms and lobster “They are all for me, ain't they mamma? Emma Isn't to have any, is she?” Di , A é m began the little boy ravbing everything. ‘palaces where poli ss well, They are a By Roy L. McC: 2 : ieeverytt ; . a i . u . cCardell, At this the Ji ed to scream and began to pull everything out \ alittle too prone to is, to jewelry more YS is tae F of the iittle bo: fi pant i N small town," said Mr, Jarr g from a fH 7 hat’ bool famed the little girl, | davish than is accepted good t is the use of having money! OT verle, ‘‘there Is alw yimmani| vAviniaat sel (Ra Bani @ Vous eletet PE rare i ‘unless you can spend it, and 1e good of spending it unless it) generally the local dr tne a Mrs. Jarr, “I never saw a child like Emma. If she sees ‘ . : | wears a black skull cap, sum drink : : é e ave ltl i KeS se? | P Wi ring she is just determined to have It | eel mie | ake and, in a sneaky, resp w he town yu give him the book'” said Mr, Jarr to the little girl. “He's a big cry | ith i th and" — and you take the paper dolls.” 1 Mra, Jary. and druggists 4, as the ieat aff v6 didn’t want th and the littl aper doll ew the book at lim and gr: t ttle E ny tely seized upon hem, Here,” n, Whereat she th acquired Then the i Sapuoutnauieind| said Mr, Jarr, “Ill divide the books and paper dolls and you children Now go in the next room and play, like good c 1 b z made, each child wanting what the othe t refusing withdrew Into the dining-room and promptly began to fro th other, ngs and entreaties, finally was compelled to go man all the presents awa nlldren and lock t both children began to bawl at thelr lungs and a to be whipped Lovely of Mrs { as Tomakean of less than $200,000 is the kin: crop, with \ to do the t of a mod yard to w suming that t real champag chtldren were ppy in poverty, but given the re, but fight ann K iil caps and having defunct “You go on out and leave me to manage them!" +o— good things of yoare “]) guess you would lik ts!’ sild Mrs. Jarr y and I They dolls for the the case, f y signs of i T enormous i 7 ‘ JauBREES Literary Towns. wine openers f zing peepee g haa just blossomed out in Canada, whore there 1s ; as ts of Shakespeare. The nearest the United States comes to and HE town of K | only one to’ having a Shak champagne neare on the map is the town of Shake, in Oregon, says ing to the the Memphis Commercial Appeal. For some inscrutable reason the great Eng- f al} + ! her, an s will make the chil- lish dram was never popular among the new town namers {n North If all sald Mrs, Jarr ‘America, although we have in the United States thirty Miltons, three Gold- fre raised eve ere in the ot as mica, look= siniths, four Dickensea, thirty-odd Scotts, twenty Byrons, two Tennysons and at on a neignboring fire Notwithstanding all the Browning clubs, there tsn't a Brown. creased ¢ one Thackeray way in wt the ott comes out of even if it did at becomes of a com: Letters from 1 the People. | Raises a Point of Justice, tigate, a AL al : Petrifying. i true that one mus pr oe | ' : | ; é t Advice to Tenuckmen. a) few L ? yey fe ae nyt B28 ADOAMNS we MRS. WYANDOTTE—GRACIOUS! THAT MUST BE “BIG BILL” WE HEAR SO MUCH ABOUT! $M conversed. he could get that aimoa’ e- ( | nome NEO f s Daily Magazine, Monday; July 20, 1908. | QP @GOOADDGE D DEODODDGHVDDHDHDDDHDOOIDOHHOIOPDDHGHSOIOD ; Fifty | Great Love Stories of History 8 By Albert Payson Terhune NO, 11-KING JAMES AND JOAN BEAUFORT, A N eleven-year-old Scotch boy was captured in 1405 by English officlals as he was on his way to France to be ed ed. The boy was James, only liv son of King Robert III. of Seo! nd and Scot- and were quarreling h each other, So the capture of the latter » crown prince was looked on as a master stroke of diplo III. died the next ye to persuade the ds macy. Ro! English Kin Scotland, an The Ei him. He thirteenth ce ry yout he grew to manhood won f stood prison he si nai ate provided for yut which no oner king as Once as he > and as a poet the window of bee } A Royal Lover. Paes » and he be. So eloquently did he plead his suit t She was Lady J kinswoman to ¢ poem entith erated h what Engl countries and would, So James and brated {n Fet their captive Ki freedom, jou prset and wrote a nd he conse- two was just n the two rival rotland. as cele- ) ransom in their james thus neved in count- twelve But the iim to turn 3 wife's advice, nd his A Fight; } For Life. ¢ tere until e outside, mloor hrew oy a sword 8 before he ken by i for the Ire she band name Joan this erties Miasing nombers of nication to Cirenlation Department, of one-cent stamp, Will be suppited apon ape venting World, apon receipt | Broadway Mythology. By Ann Evans. — o i > trembled with Stage door an umbrella ia a $16 topper to res- 1 shower of BieGuale: flcent Trew rinkl ed, th orchestra Danae say her ANN EVANS — mai added n with the For th Danae, the business.” Jupiter could not understand why the fused to fall for either lov loot. To him an “ac t a moto d bacchante, ie had learned that Danae was am- . and he was prepared to o | the disadvantage of a double ein wit a double chaque. But his Jovian brow | Was beating a rapid retr | of hta head, with only a few str to ir Wn all-powerful nod now produ more startling than a waiter with the bill, As success delayed, Jupiter's ardor waxed, and he was quite ready to com: | mit matrimony to win her, show hit with Jupiter in the Rain, iles thundered and the air cleared the shower plant of am- a career but @ own hung Uke pulling. A chateau 1 wine poured, diamonds fi Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. By Helen Rowland. Jo all of the lost hearts go7 Well, most ee 6 go “down Where the Wurm girl's life is to find out why respond to him aad red a man's love love-sickness, bes al setence never ec t ity plays so small > average A marriel woman has ar fully anall chance of vooubulary, er exe@pt ind a girl knowing ss. ts letting ‘itive soul A gir] to the theatre tina five im know a k Jin a taxteab, It r | cent street car with p t eclac and | When a woman tays “There are no secrets veen my vind ang Bie" 4 ie @ eure sign that ene hasn't found out any of his, ‘ 6 .