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Published Dafty Except Seater oA ANGUS SHAW. Pree. end Ti ind Press Publishing Company, Nos. 68 6 63 w, New York rena... TLITZER Junior, Beo'y. ee ee Row. nels Recond-Ciass Matter. nd and the Continent and ‘All Countries In (he Tnternationsl Postal Union. Favored 0 the at New ¥ Bubscri jon Rates | to Fhe evento For ro) the U: nen bead | Ganndi 50] One Yoar . bar One Month Bae NO. 18,06: 4. GREELEY AND THE TRIBUNE. N a well known and often quoted passage of his “Recollections of a Busy Life,” Horace Greeley wrote: “I cherish the hope that the journal I once projected will live and flourish lony after I have | mouldered into | It was a hope natural enough to an earnest worker | who did not wish the thing his heart and brain had wrought out to | perish with him when death came. It is, moreover, a hope that in a large measure has been fulfilled. The Tribune lives and flourishes and will doubtless continue to do so for generations to come. But if by the phrase “forgotten dust” Greeley meant to imply that his memory may be lost from the American mind while any news- paper lives, the saying tempts to laughter. He is retnembered and honored not for his journal but for himself. He shares with Frank- lin and with Lincoln the immortality of an undying personality in the memory of his countrymen. There will be little left of America as we know it when any monument is needed to save from the oblivion of forgotten dust cither his name or the inspirations of his life. oe BUTTER AND EGGS AND POLITICS. RESIDENT DRAKE, of the Philadelphia Produce Exchange, is quoted as saying that the speculators | who stored up eggs and butter last fall have now very good reason to be sorry for themselves. He cites the case of a Western man who bought eggs | at twenty-three cents a dozen, stored them for | months, and then had to wholesale them in Philadelphia at sixteen | cents. As for the butter men, he says they will have to send about | $3,000,000 pounds of it to Europe to save themselves from absolute | loss. These things are the result of the protest of the once derided “caltimate coneumer.” They are a proof that when the ordi- ry, delicacies of life are held at a price too high for the common pt. ple | the loss to the stomach may be on the consumer, but the loss to the | pocket reaches the speculator. Meantime the question remains why we should tolerate a tariff that promotes speculations in foodstuffs to such an extent that after denying American eggs and butter to our own people, speculators can send them to Europe and sell them cheaper than at home. + GHOSTS IN THE MARKET. NUMBER of Massachusetts fishermen called at the | White House to protest to the President against | free trade in fish with Canada. When they left they reported that the President had told them they were “seeing ghosts.” The President was right. But the cod fishers | of Gloucester are not the people who are seeing ghosts in the market | place. No less a man than Speaker Cannon, addressing a meeting | of the National Association of Wool Manufacturers at Washington, | said: “Ask the fruit growers of California what they are going to do | when Canadian fruits are free?” The Onalifornia fruit grower will be puzzled to answer. How is he to grow oranges, lemons, limes, prunes, apricots, citrons, olives, loquats, dates, tangerines, persimmons and pomelos in competition with Canada, when in a few years more he will have to compete with Alaska? Ghost seeing fs an awfal thing. oo A GERMAN ANTI-JINGO. OL. GADKE, a German military critic, has joined the chorus of civilization in protest against the! huge waste of armies and navies. These armaments, he says, do not tend to preserve peace but to men- | ace peace; and, furthermore, upon the eight great | nations they impose an annual expenditure of up- ward of $2,000,000,000. | The argument {s not new. The figures add nothing to public | information. Interest in them is due almost wholly to the source +98 |decay, She wan of high Brooklyn I think,” savd Loerum, “that [am amply warranted in advising you to iay| Money: Maw?” aaked the boy. ee Seed quixotic CoM | found out that my voice was not phe= from which they come. German authorities have hitherto upheld | lineage, of a provid olt family of Je HELIA LENE Here e On Te GRU CEL LCRA ar acenT’ Noe @ Challe laree coun, | oka RID i Geant agit aire, | OYfesA TON ON Or To age wee oot 8 sane ieee . i eld | tie Is eonully Bea @ little eight to five on the proposttiot 1 m. > arge crowd, | : hen f om th no duty to 3 goorned tight opera Gain the military epirit and maintained that a standing army is a standing | tur eee eer eateesiel) yiang [Of course—merely from half to three-quarters of a million of the beauty and) Jar, Bie © Bene SAA RHE: PA RO ahaa I pressed him, “you think | Yn Gf Ona Wa’ hen Rar T ee: , ) 101 ef ‘or sub-trop: jan’ (ae ak one _ SAKA gulliinase, ME bale ‘ow ol ae s d I © no responstbiity to him? for the highest. So I it. An opposi vols. ip , | valry of our , along with seven or eight thousand milliners, about tw aja ii iar ahr ears onath , | for the highest. So I contented my soul benefi pposing voice from that quarter naturally compels at- | ifs ; : ip Le TIC ENAMEL GLE ic satan OUCRAPRL AK toRTannare ccooucie ofr hopes of trying to raise any hous For whatever happened, Twanted thas with ‘the mublimities of oratorios,. and tention. | But here tn New York she had meth oe private detectives, the Police and Fire departments, visiting delegates, plants At all, bros he ca am-| settled for me. 1 wanted to bi “ft my more frivolous ambitions with fas!- ae ‘ with nothing but disappointment In her | HESS erga dale aan s pet and It DOES cateh the mic And he gave 1 nant AS" sonable recitals, and gradually I came In the conrse of events, however, it is fairly certain that German | parior or front window flora, save th Reece Sue LeU se catherine: (igre, Ganaidaring fix the old cat, maw!" cried Mas-| ances that Twas freethat Wiltam ve @ place, amall but distinotive, " + , a | had flourished f now Bra. sli auc ne er lonsidering | on willie. e the dish," | Lieyal’s soul never had been or could be font gine public sentiment will be forced into revolt against the Kaiser's mili- | — Leal ea: ASA | fe noither of the contracting parties has ever done anything a a hihi Diag titi pagent Neotae e oitity Bits de happy, uneventful now, this tragedy! 4 ‘ paca Bs : e ed few momen i tain: mising Dr. gree ARDY: vi . : eH : Tt Ss true that the young woman's parents have upward é Aeon ee pialesibesery ct le eo aire then, promising ara. Wi ha, GLa ann tarism. It is either that or bankruptcy. You Know, Willie.” sald Mra, Sarr, | 5 f dollars, but they seemed to have learned the knack of spending | (e MmOsl vi lor ening 80. By KI") Ray to see fia inthe ean and ae Miter theuaht Ga coetne enPy ene - = more in sorrow than in angers “Il ie with pather les# nolse and mom taste than most of our other Nothing But | spine wits i range our plans, T lay awake ail nists in me laid forever, strangled perhaps costs mainina a dollar and a quarter] 4, J ng by her pictures, of which I have seen upward of 6,00, T should “ents ugg oanGh vy. pet | Eoin to dineover a Baty seus ore in that last drama at St, John ig L tt F th P to fill the n dish, and with the care| .. the % woman herself averages up about ke almost any other} There: Nie aay we aed wile a Pal ystept ' ‘aid nat had been #0 nearly captured then vhat etters From the People| anata srt pes otante they |S ing monn ot ler age and wait Rursiermare: she had almost reaahe eve ihe 2s 2a ty 19 re, em wera clea 10 ng: at ot | seed fo mn cold apend the gat last and look nice for months, These] mature age when she'd quit wearlng a plait down hor back before the omcial| Wren Mr. Jarr returned home shortly | want to marry tt. tay ins i CN | of my life rejoicing over my escape : - ferns, before they were very recently | recs que cololtion her rede, thuvlan thoughtn; envbitions, dasiren: ovis, |Screrwerd nese. warn took him aside ang | fave to many Wallen lid, Dr. Hae | dh, 1 walked warily—remembering Wille . ° ‘ 1 ess ae , molting her te notes, thoughts, ambitions, desires, eves, | afterward Mit wat site: dade himself had abeol > of the iatter liar, Lioyd And A rs ! “A Real Western Life. thin in time, About two weeks ago 1| DI shed and abused iy thin manner: | air and t which showed tremendous self-control and modesty on the part SANG A Hae Bae PMA mie duty, and 1 meant to avail myself of | Gvery spring and suture tor re j To the Editor of The Brentns World: a 1 run down by @ wa, a| Were fresh and green am ad | of all concerned. \ iden : am” | chat absolution, |and she was proud of me, and the Di ‘ Y d of me, un } I wish some reader who ta well in- which 3 make the ste tor {Suat had the ferna and plants renewed | Wrye. pra. Weis ceaian aero Anite Auk ahi SGbmaRiieacon alan iNae | At | In the morning T saw Dr. Ray aga: m Jeans were kind, and 1 thought myselt 1) i " _———— @ made up my y 4 4 formed would Wt me Snow where I can | men shriy Et it wot my goat to nee | the other day And naw look at them" plain Engiteh a Pair of Deuces, which is one deuce higher than moet of the They Got Theirs | ct tava, made up my mind now te in. safe and permanent harpor, 0 eater 1d when | Women standing there unmoved by waa: | Maate Ile looked at the dempoites a over here for wives; but in other respects he y ‘Ss t etbolgd ft yin rt one Night, at a ny 60 to lead a real fe and w en anding there un 1 by wa, aster gt ies hompalin ver here for wives; bu all other respects h ey Uo eir: ‘Alison at once and tell her, with any|nad been one of the performers, 1 met is the best time of the year to go. fy w more than tais do we|ferna and whiny again th | app “ decent, quiet-spoken, middle-aged gentleman, who's y ow about a" ' saying so I do not mean to go We to prove that women are neartiess? | hadn't touched them Aegina reservations, 6h BAAS FON, Miow, abot) Leonard Hall, He was at that’ time » | ° t men are neartiess? | Radn’ , h we dering, 2 Mr. Lloyd. Then she can break the e-| coming man—a pianist who had alread and shoot Indians; but to get em H “Who else could have asked his! y that, except to the caterers, the florists, the oMictating clergy: & Kagement for me, Tt will not be neces | y., ' y ¥ : fk ¢ on a national reputation, know of some place where the winters | To the} {Tue Prening World went out to the store, leaving you plays | 4s playin some's Wedding March, such an event would not attract much v | Tater, you and T oan be married, with. | expected. I had met talented men tee Are not 0 very severe. Iam nineteen, Replying to the measure problem |ing In the house, Your Ittle alster 19) outside attenti sons who just as interesting and just as useful get out haste or scandal, That will ve 198) fore, so tt wasn't his talent that dazzled Years old, very strong for my age, and Wilch asks if the dealer gatned or lost spending the afternoon with little Mary | married every few hours without a riot a of third alarms being turned in | wt way, 1 do ude way Wp % ont | me, And I had met men of much more can stand the rough life. Others may °” lis transaction, I reply ax follows: Rangle at Mary Rangle's house; it is But you can take it on the word of an old veteran that when the wedding jim this as a rival lover. dort i to | Diililant appearance, But Leonard Hall, i Ge itieaated 1h seating any advice © there are 8 quarts tn a bushel | Gertrude’a afternc Gul, And YOUR! hella vinw out on (iebla sant front tha Churchioe’ tie Leavenel Vaan oo ie you avon te Beeman with not a beautiful feature in his on this subject. J. H, 2% bushels will oontain 640 quarts, which, | father tant he You MUST have! Gouroh of Saint Midas Mazuma, or whatever church where these nuptiais are | Wfe obeved me readily and so effectus|swarthy face, Hor & beautiful line in tsi oe when bought at # cents a quart, coat|done It. billed to take place, that there'll be a solid block of frenzied females and @ aprink- ally that I boarded the train for New| 2 Sunil! Feeinitone ohenk Tiyan pias milecastne Wasa om $578, Now, to sell this merchandire @t Wille still denied t ke ANd, | ling of ostensible mates rampaging up and down Fifth avenue, and the front en- York that afternoon, with Aunt AllSON's| thy thing’ that had. slept man oaeate, es aide tha iets’ abe: ® cents a pint Hquld measure tt is with @ sigh, Dut with Hh res litions | trance will resemble a suffragette congress, an annual election for President of the | ent and boar Me bes Nagy | throughout four years as to make me Sieg meeiian acs necessary to reduce the numbers to the Spartan motier led Master Willie) Dp. A. R., feeding time In Bronx Zoo, a subway crush, the Ere train shed and | Cea Tn ayers eee ine noton res | RRUeve tt dead, Plaine campaien of 17 cuble Inches, One bushel dry measure off by force and, after a struggle (for] iterary hour at Matteawan all sorambled together and garnished with a polise Fhe UNE they Toe ee Ganind me I went home that night and shut my- paign. af T7 contains 2100.42 cubte inches, One pint) Master Willle was strong and endeay grated up fine, The bride will be lucky {f she escapes alive and the| | leaatn: bd tacks ; self into the dark in my dear, good lit- “Ae Hea Chia Nquid measure contains 23.8 cored to escape), succeeded In applying @| groam ought to be a thankful man {f he's stil weartng his clothes by the time eta tle room and did battle with the deva To the Editor of The Breving World: inches, Therefore tf one bushel dry wooden-backed hair brusl {te vaaahan the ichancal | Chapter VII. Leonard Hall had wakened. But it was { “Are wom ag heartless as men?” I measure contains 2160.42 cuble inches 20 woukd do the most good | “And there'll be many a poor but ambitious woman who'll take her fractured | UEN AN “1 Ba Nee Abas 4 bed would T just saw Wish genders would discuss that ques- bushels will contain 49084 cultc Inches. “There! maid Mra, Jarr, when she. collar bone and her black eye and the wreck of her hat back to her qulet flat and went straight to da’ ofl fee aut thelp aitiecat mee gli Sart tion, It has interested my friends and ‘The number of quid pints contained could get her breath, “THAT ts for be proud and grateful all the rest af her life that she was lucky enough to Ment Aunt Alison's, Mr Mrs. me, and. Leonard. Hall's’ mouth, tos i it wt ‘us much material for lively dis- men rey yeti in ei iahe gr} a spoiling mamma‘s beautiful ferns, and jer way in to where she got @ grand view of part of the left elbow of a thind Duncan, 4 nitddle - aged | heavily full for beauty, laughing at cussion, However, we eventually eame Niigata pints; which when sold at. 9 THIS!" (here she renewed the punitive | deputy assistant usher," FA couple, charming ar ild-| me~laughing away my it f to the conclusion that women are aa| cents a pint would amount to $084, Measures) “in for telling stories and] "1 wonder, said Hiram, ‘Mf tt can be possthve that in this democratic otty] “Old your uncle dlepose of HI: ingy ney were conieiporaries of {ing away my serlousne: ; heartless as men. Those who think oth-|He will therefore lose $1.15 on this, denying you toughed the ferns there are some who worship wealth and titles.’ estate satisfactorily” fe Aunt. Alison's—and yet h bayer away my ae ae erwise would probably be convinced of transaction. Vv. 3. We Master Jare howled and dodged and "Yes," eaid Loerum, “I wonder,” “Ne, but hie lawyers a + AlagR eq midgie-aged Se iJ wed.) > y " a Loe oe he nt 3 me Dns come ene.» -ctice shesee -- Be i a os Maids she Mrs. Copyright, 1911, by The Prees Publishing Co, (The New York Word.) By Roy L. McCardell. 66 OW, Willie” said Mrs, Jarr, N with forced calmness, “it you will t the truth wmma teh you." I never touched {t, mamma! Hon- Mrs, Jarr, re- straining the tears of vexation with kreat diMecuity, again repeated $8 that she would FOV LERRDEE ot punish Mus- tee Jarr if he would tell all, Bhe held in her hand the dish of ferns that had graced the Jarr sideboanl he- tween meals and adorned the table dur- ing the family repastx ‘The ferns were shattered and shorn. The collection of small but shapely plants in the oval embossed dish had been crisp and unmarred when last Mra, Jarr had beheld them, In the inimical climate of Harlem Mrs. Jarr, all her married life, had seen er rubber plants and palms wither and World Daily Magazine. S | the will not pon- | est, Tdtdn't!” whined the ttle | Jarr boy. | Winter Flower: By Maurice Ketten. aturday. Februar y 4.1911; The Week’ By Martin Green. ‘Capetight, 1214, hy The Pres Publishing Ca (The New Yer Worldh OW would you ilke to call up| tendent»-the clerks at Informatie! ; Centrai for a number tate at | bureaus, the railroad ticket agents, the. + night and have a deep base! sellers of shirts, neckties, suspenders voice, with sug-| and socks, the clothing salesmen, the Kestion of booge! tailors, the hotel clerks, the steamboa® and cigarettes in| pursers, the sleeping car conductors, {t, yawp ‘Aw,! the elevator operators, the corporation, © ewan’ at you?” | employess who come in direct contact asked the head) with the public? All males! polisher “T except the ticket sellers tn thes } By the diMcult! atres. As a class they are ellgthle te process of reading | the Ancient Order of the Grouch. Bu® your mind," re-| 1 don't get the claim that women are plied the laundry| more patient than men. If you are man, “Ef collide | iuaky enough to know a telephone gtrt $. with the con-| ask her about it.” / lugion that you \ } Under the Red Flag. | y afte communing! | with yourself on the proposition of cer- tain well-meaning ladies, who busy : ID you read how Reilly, thé themselves with the affairs of others 6 D con, nO ap & eres a: ae Andrehists and took thelr ted flag away from them?" queried the head paitsher: “Retlly ts a game cop, and we give to Promote legislation, looking to pro- hibition of employment of telephone girls at night. Well, don't permit your- | htm credit,” said the laundry man, “but many another cop could have done the |wame thing. ‘These red flag Anarchiate | PARTIN GREEN self to Ket dippy abet ft “With the usual impetuosity of re- formers the ladies in question have stu- diousiy refrainel from consulting the night telephone girls. Had they done ao | are peculiar bugs. | they would have been wised to the fact |" : that the queens of the switchboard have | “Get @ bunch of them together, Mf them up with hot alr, get them to no more sympathy with the proposed ‘orm than they would have for a law ng away with diamond engagement 8. "No working girl is more closely aafe- guarded than the telephone operator. | Her quarters are comfortable, her pay 4 satisfactory to her} ind she's the one to be satisfied. And the girl engaged in night duty has relief from the con- tinual strain that hears on the girl on watch during the business hours. “Tt 1s atated by the Indies who are mothering the prosected revolution that some men say rude things to the night Are men more rude tn tn yarmneting wbout destruction of law and order, and the sight of a blue ault am! brass buttons will afflict them with chilliains, There is no particular dane ger in the Anarchists when they are marohing or erupting language in pub= the daytime? | ttc, telephone girls. the nighttime than They may be more mushy, but I doubt} “The lone, crazy Anarchist, boosted if the men who telephones at night! along by a few ounning cowards in the are ruflans, even in a small minority. | background, ts the dangerous Red. He'@ “The night telephone girl has a big|the lad that sneaks in and throws the’ edge over ister who works fn the] bamb. ‘ ‘While the danger Mes in the lone Anar nist and the few secret conepir- the fact remains that these are S| cacouraged and nerved up by the big public meetings, some of which ere ad~ dressed by leading citizens. We are easy on our Anarchists in New York and laugh over one cop holding up 2,000 of them, but we haven't had our lesson yet." day time in that, during certain period: she can hold protracted conversations with a certain party. Quite some spoor } Oh, What's the Use? j Ing {8 done over the wires in stilly Loeatenanarannmrenranat SE! fd the head polisher, ] “that Paul Cravath, the lawyer, deplores the fact that men like | Hill and Morgan and Vanderbilt and | Schiff do not take an active part in the government of the people.” watches of the night “For mine, the night telephone ! may continue to enjoy her job. But 66 | I take issue with some who say that men be one operators be. patient as women Mike! For patience w York man has the tra he average Jarr Enacts the Role of “Conscience” in a Domestic Tragedy of the Same Name flinched and struggled, but at least got half the whipping aimed at him. ‘m sure you are breaking my poor heart.” walled Mra, Jerr, nervously, The Browe Brothers Hiram and Loerum By Irvin S. Cobb. sright, 1911, by The Prem Publishing Co. (The when her tired arm estopped. “But you Just had to be punished, you naughty the corner till your father comes home York World), NOTE," resumed Hiram, taking up the current ton) whe he'd left off, “that s coming week.” of the day right ety is all agog over the wedding of the $8] “Yes, indeed, sald Hiram, ‘'T've noticed same thing myself. Not erly 1s soclety agog—and I will say this for soctety: that it includes some of the best little agoggers we have—but many individual) well-wishers are also gogeing: and as for the society editresses of the Sunday papers, wh those tntense Indies are going right out of one violent gox into another, Ry next Tuesday, which T belleve day of the ceremony, I'm willing to bet you you'll see nothing but goss on every hand—big gogs, little goes and medium sized goms, home-grown or domestic Kaxs, imported goggle- eyed gogs and the large golden russet Southern California gogs running six to the quart “T rather imagine there will be @ crowd of the curio: about the church where the nuptials are to be celebrated,” sald Hiram - boy! Now you come on out and sit in! ditional ox |telephone gir backed off the boards. The are uniformly patient and courteous because every central operator has an {nspector lamping her from behind during business hours and Keeping tab on her conversation. But who holds down the Jobs where patience jand courtesy overshadow every other) “Wihy should "the | consideration? laundry man, “when they have so st Felt Site ANG beets) YO 88 li «brow: the crossing cops, the| many hired legislators doing it for Debio Bout Me the ovine: DUES! nage wal : floor superin- | them ?"* shows for a week’ | She led the recently trounced lad out! jin the hallway with her, looking | ' Straight ahead: ‘Then a sight met her eyes that made her gam with a pang, I h and a sense of the injustice she had) done the boy. For the family cat was on the table nibbling the ferns (or rather what waa left of them) as, though they were so much catnip! | Tf any one had told Mrs. Jarr that her cat~ANY cat—would eat ferns or ote e Story of a Jilt —:By Herself:— Any Ter slender, fragile grace had somehow: time, though her bloom had long ince vanished. (Copyright, 1910, by Doubleday, Page & Co.) SYNOPSIS. It, a Kentucky girl. after a seriee ¢ table plants e would have laughed at S jere. affarns, ‘ to a convent manta 10] Mr. and Mrs. Duncan had an apart- {them, But, especialiy in winter time, | SA" euln' ht makes. an Vays ity ent 50 nner ane avenue, sant ry cats do. The cat Jumped down at their 4 ‘pais away ail | Dow rom ashington Square, re i intewsted ia | member how sweet and greep the Square spproach and scampered gulltily wrny: ad, sans pom Dr Ray | was; spring was still fresn and children ‘There, mamma, wee’ It was the MMfors to sacrifice ha own | played riotously in the little oasis the leat ded Willie Jarr. ‘I told you I! ver from #0 Wretchel & mar jolty had them of spared name Manhattan always conjires up for me didn't touch them! | It was in Mrs, Jarr's thoughts to kirs that bit of lower th avenue and {the lad and ask his forgiveness, but Chapter VI. | Washington Square, and I see it as @ | Willie's words and looks bore no ves: Continued.) | Site OF BRINIG aRocenne, HARA As aes | tige of m sense of the injustice he had B never seeiied to doubt my|loq' leaves and nittle aiidrese oe j been treated with, so Mrs, Jarr con- Willingness to marry him. |” Because the luxuries of the town laid | tented herself with saying You see, [ had told iim that no hold upon me—because, too, I was | Weil, Willie, [am sorry T punished he was the right man, and sick of profitiess trafficking with the you without cause, But you deserved a he Was too truthful himself affections of others—I had now no de« whipping for a lot of other things you! to doubt my truth, too faithful to sire for anything but a life of simple | , “ js. peace and the pursult of a pave done and didn't get punished for, doubt my fidelity He felt no mis- P Pp Soon after renching New York T made musical conne s that resulted in a choir position and a certain amount of |desultory concert work. I had already You can run out and get candy and see the moving pictures.” | “Can [ get anything f want with the, | Here is ten cents, | givings about my engagement to Will- fam Lloyd, for I had told him frankly w that came about Sevens ot Abe Sinn. inmate