The evening world. Newspaper, January 7, 1911, Page 10

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‘The Evening Wo _ —— eateeeeeemneeane She Saker aorid. Published Dafly Except Sunday by the Prose Publishing Company, Nos. 58 to 68 ‘er! ew York. and & Ae LITZER Junior, Beo'y, 3, ANOUO STAN How. 1 FO8R PE Pr park Row ow York as Second-Clase Matter, Fora eentaanh (Re sScrina™* All Countriestal Union, 0 Year... ° Month 50 "38 eo A PREACHER WITH THE NEWS SENSE, HP word ‘advertise’ occurs twice in the Bible, and ‘publish’ a hundred times,” observes the Rev. Dr. Christian F. Reisner, pastor of | Grace Methodist Episcopal Church, in West One Hundred and Fourth street, Manhattan. “ ‘Preach the Gospel’ means publish the good tidings, the religious news.” Pur- suing this eminently practical and modern businesslike view of church work, the New York cler- gyman goes on to say that in the last twenty-five years theology has changed its forms to fit present. day problems. But men don’t know it—least of all the rushed business men who especially need the spiritual uplift. ‘They must be turned back to the church—but how? By advertising. What good does it do to cry out at them | from the pulpit of an empty church? The prophets of old proclaimed their exhortations from the | housetops, and so did the evangelists of the early Christian church. Saint Paul, as Dr. Reisner justly says, did the advance work of the new faith, most enterprisingly. There were no printing presses, so he wrote letters everywhere, to be read, copied, and passed on, adver- tising the blessings of his religion. In a later age Wesley got out hooklets and scattered them broadcast, and his Methodist successors to-day run one of the largest publishing plants on earth. Coming right down to present business, the Harlem pastor out- lines his plan of church advertising to get results. He would use the daily newspapers—not only run a paid display advertieement on Saturdays, but get in all sorts of pictures and items. Sermon topics should be sent in ahead, and readable abstracts of sermons simultane- ously with their preaching. “People want to know what the church thinke—and the papers are fair when treated fairly.” | Most essential point of all: Speak on current happenings and in- | terests from a religious standpoint. Here are a few suggested sermon | topics, calculated “to arouse sane curiosity”: | “Baseball and Reli, “Do Ruches Shut Out of Heaven?” | “Did God Send Punishment in the San Francisco Earthquake?” “A | Bible Union Labor Man.” “Real Christian Socialism.” “Are Politi- cal Bosses Necessary?” “Sunday Theatre-Going.” Tt Do An | REMEMAER TusT Sutqutcy TRIMMED “Does ood to Pray?” be any serious objection to this “There cannot, we should say, M rr, J arr, Can You Beat It? By Maurice Ketten. | WEAR IT LONG ( HE DOESN'T UNDERSTAND AWORD oF ENGLISH in Reckless Extravaganee, plan of church advertising so long | T h rows A wa Vy a P er f ec t 1 y G oo d L i e The Story. & *% of a Jilt By Herself. BYNO PSI8, The Jilt, after several disastrous eng en te, resolves to marry Irentiss Buckner, « wealthy, middie aged ‘man, whose suit her aunt, and gua riian, favory, | Chapter I, (Continued.) HE next night a lot of college boys, home from the summer holiday, called, among them Jack Spain, a childhood sweetheart whom T hed long ago forgotten. His family had moved away years before, and he had returned now only as the guest of @ college chum. He was a fine looking boy of the college type—athletlc and cleatedeyed and clear- skinned—and his conversation was of the college type, too. The Princeton foot+ ball team was his favorite topic and I would as soon have suspected a sptendid young animal of concealed sentiment. He lingered after the other boy had left, telling his college yarns, and for once I was unconscious of sex or my own charm In our merry companionship. But when he rose to go I saw suddenly how stalwart and tall my old playfellow had grown, and something must have reflected the thought {n my eyes for the answering signal lighted in his own, Ho went over into the music room, calling me to follow, and 1 aid “Y'm going to put out this ight for you, Sylvia,” he gaid. ‘It's too high for you to reach.” : Py There was a switch on the wall low enough for a ch didn’t tell him that and I didn't move, I just stood there ana tet him turn off the light at the chandelier, Then he took a step forward through the darkness and caught me into his arms. | "You've always been my girl, you know, Sylvia,” he whiep@red, |__ "Yes," I whispered back, “I've always been your girl” And THE! 8 conventence, but £ I meant it “Let Us Keep It a Secret!" 7} ef In the morning I wakened to @ sense of horror, Jack's arins, Jack's kisses seemed still to press upon me! And I meant to marry Prentiss Buckner. f COULD marry Prentiss Buckner !f only Jack were silenced and sent away! But Jack would be an Importunate lover, I had felt that tn the first touch of | his arms—felt it and surrendered to it. And if he stayed there I would surrender in, I knew at last the weakness of my own flesh, Unless I was more careful and more clever than I had ever been before JACK would marry MIE instead of ME marrying PRENTISS BUCKNER, He came, my conquering Jack, before T was through breakfast manting, of course, to see Aunt Alison! Oh, the terrible frankness of true lovers! But I intended to spare myself Aunt Alison censure, and I somehow pers suaded Jack to delay this joyous confessto: “Let's Keep it a secret a Iittle while,” I pleaded, And besides, we can’t be married for ever so long.” “Why not?" he inquired aggressively. “I finished college this spring, and I was going to work in September anyhow. NOW-—I'll go to work right away!" Will you?" I cried, seizing at that chance to get him out of town. “Why, yes," he agreed, pleased at my eagerness over his pro: | back to Louisville to-morrow if you'll promise to marry me soon. into my father's firm, you know, and I could take care of you NOW, you'd let me!” “That would be so SWEET, pects: “TU Ko I'm going Sylvia, if Tt ended by my promising to marry him in the winter, and by his promising me in return not to tell any one until I should give him permisston, “We'll keep ft a secret all summer,” I insisted, I knew that I could make Prentt: was over! Buckner propose to me before the summer CHAPTER Ii. J] ACK went down to Louisville in June, and early tn August I became engaged to Prentiss Buckner, | I hadn't broken with Jack, It hadn't seemed necessary. He had } faithfully Kept his promise of secrecy about our engagement, and though he often came up to Shelbyville for Sunday, I was too discreet | in my bearing toward him to give people reason to regard him as an accepted | lover. He wasn't very contented over that fact—he would have liked a Httle more of | love's abandon—but whenever I saw that I had taxed his patience to the break- ing point I used to turn round and bewilder him with sweetness and small eur- renders, And that would keep him grateful for weeks afterward. | Prentiss Buckner was a different type of lover, however. As simple as Jack in the sincerity of his passion, he was yet deliberate and determined as only an older man could have been There was no chance for coquetry or artifice with him, and I found myself submitting Instead of exacting submission. He and . : Aunt Alison arranged everything, while I sat passively by, a doci beloved as the system is not applied to |altcie tri. individual righteousness and phi-| Cevrright, 1911, by The tres Publishing Co, rand Worthy High Past Potentate,|to death about fires or burglars, Can't; “Put off the banquet?” inquired Mr. (To Be Continued.) lanth H f : eR elh La At lool Mr. Nutt of Nutley, will preside"—— you put it off?" asked Mrs, Jarr plain-|Jarr. “How can I? It’s too late, It's 2 anthropy. Here the reverse pol-| By Roy L. McCardell. “LN be all alone, and I'll be scared | tively. @ temperance banquet, you know, And icy should be urged, and a stand- eae " a - aaa the caterers have been working for a AG GATS oD. Near bntdt T had forgotten all week making temperance drinks. They d ard is furnished by the example | epee ? i | ? cost a great deal of money, and, not ou randadmo er ‘ Mr, Jarr arose from the sup | le . of the late Rev. Lundy H. Harris, | ; | having any alcohol in them, they won't : in wi i Efroselt'a resus e eeK §$ DS The § icon.) So. 1 sonia get te iatate Be Relegated to Attic? of Tennessee. His widow, who is himself a resound- | put off. It's too lat ‘an PRE hs | ing whack upon the! rn rare ' g0;"* the author of “The Cirenit Rider's T don't think you should go,” said - : ih era ay : | nreees A By Martin Green. lure. gar. “And the iden of staying Const, 1011, by The Press ublistdoe Co, (The New York Worl Wife,” in filing an inventory of | _ rormt what?) - away all night! .uppose women did = know the PRICE fthings un ® hor late husband's estate, writes: You didn’ a atye Comright, 1011, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). |such things?" By Sophie Irene Loeb. [470"/ 0°! ‘ thay Ns > your pocketboo rea | i Mr, Jar? with & knowing bs " “orp : 4 4 ; | HAT lad Robin, who wrecked) body Supposed to have a police drag. Ahi" sald Mr, Jarr with a DISPATCH from St. Louis said But now that SHE must make end: phe suajor pare.ot is catate ‘ f Sour” i mcs z eM 8G the Northern Hank, was some] “New York shelters many men like| look, “What do women care what be- A “Grandmothes, as an institu-|NOT ONLY meet but lap over a ancely was invested in heavenly securi-| ¢; A Noe oe ae | cleaner-up," remarked the] Robin, You see them at the big hotels) comes of their éarnilies after they tion of learning in the home, has| for the FANCY PEATIL ba 'of whic S hee! ‘| i ‘ \¢ i <2 i head polisher.| and restaurants and theatres. They|Do THEY belong to fraternal order iy shoved into] NERDS (Just that!), why, of course, ties, the values of which have been variously declared in this world, w ed y tattle had os "But ahae Ya like] find this a safe community for their|do THEY carry life Insurance in favor the attic by’ the| must fearn to epend with ea Hes Yet end highly taxed by various churches, but never realized. Te invested ° > barked ti “ae to be wised to is| operations—as long as they don't tread | of their husbands?” American Home she produces while she 1s in the process 7 . le money ‘ mntown." | ‘Well, I don't fe« arguing with oh O° fr “ Its every year not less (usually more) than $1,200 in charity—so secretly, POY & MPEARDR every Saturday | how he got so| on the toes of the big guys downtown. BREA a SCRA atte Tsai Boone Asso-] of instruct And be it known that i andi paler < pee is 7 : from the cashier's window for the tig many presumab! you'on. these a ae elation the average worthy woman who works 80 inoffensively and so honestly that he was never suspected of being Wyss, tarak aesuraly cuokea insure smart, respectable Here and in London. Laide ag 0 peg PAs Gra ee SRA ReE eon: Tone mANe & dollar ‘reach FARTHER a philanthropist, and never praised for his generosity.” hide waistcoat pocket. | cltizens to act as I pei eapepdiphaied maint retin abeaaey' which has opened] than her sister of yesterday. ; After that, {rom Mondays on, he car- stalls for him UST have been hot times 4 jeennons Lapa “4 mek omic on Ita third annual) Yes, times HAVE changed and, mari ebiieetieretitcres ried his silver change In his trousers while he was put- | 66 inden We cle Gay lone cone Neh Ae. | rou —eeanamether bas changed sjing pocket and his soft spend: ting his holes into | ay," said | something. nounces its stand| with them, I take exception to the OPENING THEIR MINDS BACKWARDS, Se NEA Das, eateaal " the fread polisher, “when 1,000] “Wall, I SHOULD go, of course,” ald against’ grand-| statement that “she h : DS, his tov ditto. Neither place bulged the bank assets | COPS and all kinds of soldiers spent! Mr, Jarr grandiy, “but $f you don't iaihee Lirounis ita | eae ni Ved he ol gein bleh oe greatly ose emart,| most of the’ day In trying to ls Mr. i M 01 8) edge necessary to cope wit! nteday 1 1% wd IPANENY Akn 7 i a o ‘ yi and a| want me to go, wy, What do I care for sate nonditions," aul War OROUGH PRESIDENTS MANENY AND CROMWELL an-| Mt. Jarr mook tin head. respectable | cit!-| couple of Anarchists and then had to|q conclave or a. banquet or belng SCT aeietarae | Cee aie ence Toe , A j No, I haven't lost any money, but 1 zen explained} set the h ‘ . Bllen H. Richards! knowledge have wider scope. We do nounce with much pains that they have “open minds” and “do aa aimost forgotten vers Niloreant | the laundryman, | oot.'® Rouse on Are and burn them | elected President of the United States of Boston not have the grandmother of yesterday o i ' orgo| ery pe ‘ . zi ’ : is to please you.” wa Neca Gt the eee not propose to hurry” in the subway matter. ‘Then they pro- nent,” he sald | tap Namie tront, Landing then) sof course,” eplied the iaundreman | neutron: area casecnione thera" ty 9 grandmother was a; How many grandmothers of the pres y rejec ‘ D nt ‘o? «What important engage- | Was like hunting deer in the night time, | “our potice force is decidedly inferior the please a ou | Competent aushority. 10. ai) SHAtsere par | ent .ere Go yOu nd, as.cf old, selegated ceed to promptly reject the Mitchel-Prendergast report, which sup- ment? You never told. me anything | hich is not classy sport, but ts muci | to | Pamreaalya owe aie Lean ee | parca soe. sedate Pilg “\ taining to the management of a house-|to the back parlor with her KNIT. plied the only means of forcing the Interborough crowd into an honest About any Important engagement,” suid | admired by gentlemen who own guns| that by all reformers It the meceelog | enakee NOU MMe he Daite, dear” hold." explained atrs, Itchards, “but she} TENG? Not much! Grandmamma. ia in. if ¢] ; rt J end like to hang antlers on the walls Ay a q | vat do Le as not the knowledge nevessary to cope | right In the foreground wit young 4 % h . od 1 4 n ir home | getting a couple of Anarchists In such | first!" 1 cavitedt al Hs ‘ap Cromwell were elected by a trusting community to free it from New 1 told you about it twol ‘The night hunter for deer goes out! in yo right to that teleprone ang | I" the a i iy 7 the Gan one Provide nine ones not recnmnise 4 T, ‘ ", " sea. eoks ago,” explain Mr. Jarre , in @ canoe with a guide and a pow ful ! Fy; household, not the home fe In hotels ather Time as he speeds by, nor does the domination of the Traction Trust. They are shifting the issue “" } ‘ call them up," said Mrs, Jarre and apartments, But in order to make| she COUN peting yi hs : 93 Re ner Rifrtil biel You never mentioned tt to me, of) hradight, Friend ¢ being a confid- looked at bia watin in wig | 0S Apartments. Bub in onie Peder Webbie he ~ the fleeting years. She and trying to hefog our citizens, Their “open minds” are opening that 1 am sure,” said Mrs, Jarre, “But| ing animal, approaches the glare of the ; sng! home possible w es! She does not retire until she is Saas eta Hah bat Era MIO ETE AWEERA THOAMIIENCANA ERABRALIL: lociog vothe By Jove ons VT ForeOC of facts. Women to-day don't produce.| retired by a GREATER will than her backwards! ; ee | Lanes ¢ it Rafferty, 1 was to meet him | ‘oy spend, And they must learn how as such saints will sigh. “It's a good! ing of what ts behind the headlight, the Ea go over to Newark ; i Be eer arta Riki : aaa “* “1 = many years since I had your con-| deer stands and rubbers until the hun- him | ‘0 mend intelligently did not have} Ail one has to do to substantiate this Me ’ Res fe Bele with him. T'll rush out and tell ™ | these conditions fifty years ago. Then, | 1g to stop an hour tn the sho} d fldences r gets clone enough to lean over and I'm not going, and I can telephone from | panamother Inherited traditions from Lda Mr, Jarr evidently had no tnelinas|shake hands with him, sAt this stage of ea franamotion iniecited traditions fromthe up fo date, well groomed. Emile tion to argue phis point | the proceedings the hunter proceeds to Tap auiskilt ented 5 tg | SOP Sete RAEN haired women on their round of DUTY ib tall You ow 1b imi) hel dadds |DibW 8 hele ihiduen the Goat \ Be quick!" cried Mra, arr. “Here's! 1 her descendants. Hut traditions | for the “family.” Or look inte th his I Ms eae the|. “Robin 4 ae a vm | thorough and efficicnt fashion as they) your hat and coat cannot guide us, living in an entirely | theatres at night or go down to Wi . “This is very important e have ‘obin dazzled hts stalls with money.|do in London. We would be foolish e his head back in the door ; o he and conclave of our lodge and after| He had the faculty of making a lttelapour it | Hae mind 1 slay a Uitle Ot and a he Legit Rey haa Saar Ih behind where grandmothers are in the peor tiny hue NG ie 7 . ined noe AY a) Perhaps Mrs, pards has bee seething centre of things and hi trains passed. One of the bo onclave the banquet. Now, I am) cush look like a whole lot. Everything | he pricinet captain would call in a hie?” he asked. ty po * are the To the Editor of The Evening World ein tell us what train gles pile to be named as Praisworthy and Im-/he got hold of tnade a nose like an| tew OGG eee a you | 7 not, toy deat,” sad dire | Piece bya ign se lendan te powers behind the gatling guns against Why ts it we never hear any more of | tre : ‘ poccable Outer Sentry, and if I do not! asset. Like the deer hunter sallying | go" je : cite : : St to! | Tene ROE MIA RP AR ROE SUD graft and fighting unprogressive law from the tunnel at One Hundred and 0,’ he would say, “Muldoon and Kil . “Stay as long as you want to, t of what the OTHER IAL fy “hald-head row? When I was a youth | p> 0 attend the ave 1 will not be se-/ forth with a headlight, Robin jumped t hink? After this o ALP for posterity. She knows! rst street because the smokestacks of duff and Glazion! and Hox midt, |" And what do you think? Afte Tone’ Abd ete ie AILCARII® BEOUDD ee one of the most amusing parts of a the-| the New Haven enginer were nad gg lected. If 1 do attend and Into the game of hunting suckers with | over to Fifth etreet and pinch a couple |excellent work in dramatic fiction, not | Goins And stay conditions | acts °M are they NOT BAK NUM. strieal entertainment wax “baid-head | was also the dial having the number of I'll have to, out of courtesy, preside \ flash of assumed financiit responsle|of Anarchists livin’ on the second floor. | enough of the bunch showed up to | EE, But there are poignant conditions| BERS, but they figure for the FUTURE row,” as viewed from other parts of the The dial on the engines of Har. | {Me banquet. That means an al JAnd mark ye, men, no vi'lence, but| make even a three handed game "Firat of all, women PRODUCE more] cnitreiiees on ey ee MOrmTinane manny: San if be tie notice the bald. trains was green and the dial of a)“ | 1 hurt you,’ And one of the nicest get-aways of fart or did tn the history | mnnorities” Of the PRIMINNT aa imine headed men once caused has relegated Fork: Conteal dmmine waa ‘brs - “What? asked Mrs. Jarr, as though ae cops Would Ko over to the |the season was used up and done for! pondey (han thay o oe ‘ ‘4 Fe ie thelr prototypes of the past. ‘They them elther to obscurity or to other! Ay io the reasons for this I cannot ae, *¢ did not hear aright | house designated,amarch up io the sec. | oA adlactaiben r world, Th the United States alone | nave not atonped, but have one along parts of the house? 1 occasionally en- | 4 4 An all-night affair’ salt Mr, Jar y i , incl 00,0) self-supporting women. | with the times, even as you and T. 4 coaches of the Harlem Railroad ond floor, kick in the door ‘and pinch | Se} ns of these not only produc 7 doy the theatre, but I greatly “miss |iraing in those days wore pr You vin Newark and there's no LT hRSARAEENIAIE) DLR CANAROMIE. Talant Sentence Sermons. Ly Oe tae! HOS Only BF What grandmothers of the past have “bald-head row JAY. 1 o, trains back after midnight, #0 1 have | shoot at the cops and kill three of them, Uiatimuensaraiaa Gh gait take ip 2 ut car measured up to Grandmothers Clare ‘The “Iron B Geet Tye fust got about time but the fourth, we he Muldoon or Kil- S nat AP circulation: er of the past was ever | B&tton of Red Cross fame, Mary Bak onlay ged nies Were le | Yeu, ip the con ‘ Quh Fay | duff or Glagion! or Hochschinidt, would a nallad Tineny fa nisducasimore! than? hoe. Edy Milawieth Cony Stanton, Susan questio: je Mental X- | To the Kaiior of ‘The Evening World dress sult! take them to the station house and it! pie very best way to Hft men is to| hae Gb 14 fath 6 nthony, the Divine Saran and hun. ereise of your mathematical readers: | 19 a marriage license required in Mas Mrs, Jare Was almost carried off her Mility, and the wise parties who fell for | Vaud be some sob for an ambulance | mart thor, cane Ineat randdaugter of this twentieth century. | dreds of others, many of them on the I€ @ foot be added to an imaginary iron | sachuseits, Pennsylvania, Now lorees by the suddenness of the news, n txee behind the fash, I aierauani fie ei saci ania ave caitel| th ae Ae ee OP DRA UCTION | firing Une even AFTER thelr allotted belt that now girdles the earth's wurface | und Coonectiont? Ne. “PH be all alone, she said Robin ts another amateur who trled | Dimitive here in our police methods | 49 irda in Uiocliny will nat make | And te Who does NOT produce pays the | sthreescore yearw and ten at the equator, what would be the dis- | trude ts going out to a dance ) play the game of high fnance without | nothing like dear old London, don't you nhl habe prpesyin <thltiaiale price of the penitent later on, Ask the! Grandmothers of to-day? Instead of dance between the present supposed be't T can't help tt, my dear," replied Mr, | suaking (he proper arrangements to| pouu# ine On : ANP | MB for gbort SAAS Ip; MRE | millionaire society woman satiated with! outing them in the attic with the (BAH miles) and the one lengthened by the ta Jar ou'll be all right, Mrs, Rangle | tupw All st | Panne te aleaiyah Geena ol emptiness of splendor > some’) spinning wheel we need them in the a toot? CHARLDS H. WRIGHT, | 1 approve of the letter on “Hroken | will come over and stay with you." | “In the ent of the amlable Wait | enenaeananamaaananaaad Heresy hunting t | thing to a first floor front, directing the LOOMS ry kestacks Ag Resolutions” signed “Mrs. Augur ny And give that man Rangle an ex-| street: money nipulators whose at- | } Keeping the Balance, of omn' ween, ie While there may be a grain of truth | OW LIE side by side with you and ‘me. To the Kditor of The Kvening World: entirely meets my ideas, New Year's cuse to be out all night?’ asked Mrs, | tention he attracted by his futile Hitle | Sasplng the Malaneh, § | We find the woret in all by trying to| at we needa m learn to spend in-| OUR HATS OFF TO. GRAND= Answering the inquiry of Mr. Dwight} Day, she writes, “is an arbitrary date.” | gJavr, “Mrs, Rangle Would no more do | biow-offs and manoeuvres, Robin was | ¢ ¢ said the head polisiers| tne best of any one tolllgently, we must remember that | MOTHER! Pynobon jr. regarding the color of rail- |She adds: “Why wait twelve montis to | tuat than 1 would spend the night with | @ pirate, ‘Phe Anish of such t# inevita- | I “that Bradley Martin jr. has} oft: grandmotier had not the WHEREWITH Sr eel road emokestacks years ago, I have to|renew your resolutions?’ “Every day | her and give YOU such an excuse.” ble. Playing at high finance without legally established that he ts! ‘phe worst foe you have is the man | to spend, She was content with the oc- A HEROIC TASK, say that he ts right in fis assertion, |she quotes, “is 4 fresh beginning, every | “Well, this is Important,” said Mr, | arranging to have some of the profits|not an American citizen.” atau Marat teil Sau ehkialan casional ten yards of cashmere that he: I've tried to tell ma ‘The writer resided on One Hundred and’ day is the world made new, You who|Jarr. “You get a thousand dollars {f Tj eased to the big men in the game is| “Well,” replied the laundryman, “at ~ lord brought home to her on his once-a- And my dear daughter Mabel, Eighteenth street, between Third and are weary of failing and sinning, this | die in good standing in the lodge. Be-| like trying to run a gambling-hougse in] about the same moment some immigrant) It ix no use holding up the divine | year visit to the city Not to judge a cigar Fourth avenues, from 1869 to 1878, and |x a beautiful hope for you ing elected Praisworthy and Impeceable! the Tenderloin without seeing some- took dut his first papers, Things keep| throne if you're treading on the ehil- Imagine HER sending it back to be By the gold on the many times wes at Fourth avenue when Mrs, DERBY, (Outer Sentry is a great honor, ‘The body Who is supposed to know some- pretty well balanced in the U.S. A.” dven's toes to do it,—Chicago Tribune, | EXCHANGED! Why, she often did not Detroit Free Press,

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