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* enormous. A Pablished Daily Pxcept eigen OM by fhe, bad Publishing Company, Nos. 68 to 63 Row, New York & ANGUS SINT, Prom and Mires’ JOurrh pv SPER oe Sec'y. Park Row, Entered at the “Post-Oftice at Now York as Second-Cls . © Matter, England and the Continent and All Countries in the International Postal Union. to. The Evening United States tion | Rates ‘orld for (he Bie Kio Fohin: VOLUME NEW YORK AND HER “PAY FOLLS. MONG the concessions home rule by the charter for this city ity government authority to apy late the city pay roll, free fron Albany For and Canada, $3.50 30 One Year One Month....+ granted to the principle of proposed new fers upon the framers is one that ec mand regu- ill tinker wana troubling at f ‘Lhere vaght to be no difference of opinior to the justice and the expediency of euch a reform. The right of a people to say what shall be done with the money their government takes from them is one of the oldest prerogatives that New York as a city ever) stood for. A fight for it began when the town was called New Am- eterdam. It continued through the whole period of British rule. It will go on until the issue is settled finally by being settled right. The desire of the up-State legislator to regulate New York is! natural. The feeling was shared by the Dutch and by the British, but it is not American. Every pay roll should he controlled by the people that pay it. ———_—+4+. SHOULD BE REVOKED. Y order of the Superintendent of tlie State Bank ing Department certain information filed in his office by trust companies in accordance with thi law, which has hitherto been open to the press, is hereafter to be deemed confidential and kept from the public. The reason assigned is that a publ cation of the facts in question virtually gives advantage to business rivals, and is, therefore, an injury to the companies concerned The plea is not without merit. Certainly neither the State nor the press ought to injure any corporation by exposing its secrets for the benefit of rivals. But in this case any injury of that can hardly be very great, while the benefit flowing from publicity is well ordered, well managed trust company will re- ceive nothing but profit from a fair exposition of its business to the general public. Moreover the order is reactionary. It tends to return to dark ness, when the deniand is for more light. It should be revol --—______— THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. (BURN of Idaho has proposed in the Senate that} the price of subscription to the Congressional | Record be changed from $4 a session to $1 a year, | As the proposal happened to coincide in point of | time with the recommendation for an increase of | postage on advertising magazines it has been made the object of a good deal of flippant comment. The point of the humorists has been that Congress ia trying to get up a big circulation for its own paper by handicapping the magazines of the people. The proposal, however, merits honest approval. While the) Congressional Record is not a wholly reliable journal of proceedings in either House, it is nevertheless deserving of much wider reading than it gets. A reduction of the price to a figure that will put it in reach of every serious minded citizen is to he commended. Not much | can be said in praise of it as a magnetic novel! and taps the boss dynamo, | +° | PETER COOPER'S FOUNDATION. HEN the alumni of the Cooper Union were gatis kind but it is a live wire ered at their banquet it was announeed that there] | had been them amount of $140,000 for the pury raised among donations to the} se of erecting a i, new building for the Institute. “ On the principle that self help is the only r tifying than would | 'M The Evening World Daily ARREST You FOR RUNNING OVER A MAN oa ARE Tou Sure ge SAW HIM UN a ry MAN? Hey! You! You can’ Go ‘LIke THAT — CAN You FURNISH YES, SIR 1Am DEAD SURE T Magazine, Wednesda Can You Beat It? By Maurice Ketten. 'NEED You as AWITNESS, You SAw THE Ace OENT CAN You FURNISH BAIL FOR YouR Presence IN Courr tn Two WEEKS? SORRY, OLD MAN, BuT we HAVE To rah SURE THAT WITNESSES | NA Wit NY! Court. NESS You BEAT ae Gi What Every Husband Knows 1011, byt (The New Press Publis World.) Sophie [rene L EN ma Oo on “Really, HARK and then jet Mt Henry AWAY from Said the wise wee the other day pertence brings wisdom) about things. M WON'T Naten. ised to get cross PHOUGH hing Co, oeb. me and men may G0. | “ nageing woman goes on} eed: Neb lees 30 does the husband and} forever— her. it ts no RPIN 1 would out’ on 1 never T I was manent help, this gift to the Union is more Keeping the even igh he have bee imes the sum if gained by adr ing or flattery | om Aat tr sed to ANSWER, but of some ostentatious exponent of the philanthropy of coir finally he took it WITHOUT saying a ) word. ‘Ther Would be away so mu An institution that can depend upon its own sons and daughters et Patepen finall Say for support has justified its existence and given proof of the worthi-| reailza ut the fw uit was ACNE, f f ) as 1 A 8 at GER ness of its teaching. Of all the men that have shared their wealth | ¥&* 1 with the people of New York there is net one that did it with more | of love and less of self-secking than Peter Cooper. And it is to know that the gifts now coming in to extend the work | founding are from those that love both it and hin | | [Le tters From the People| OPP PPD POOL SELLE LOP TEL ATOLL PILING Octogenaria \! wash To the Batitor of Te bs i W ' Women's house T was delighted wit 8 views essen $ t ant Pressed by “Octogenarian 1 be} ehtidren rar ; an to| pleased to hear © of the same sort ae tn ae ieee genarian mentions as Aen zens ee seldom have t fluence to bring the employer 1 ' * ‘ : lara vice in respon: ait KT a sult ts the nm « al « “ w . a en . t de gentleman n friend nue on ss, Hoys usually know that this ex nF ‘ take of w ' good work Dua wea aaa ta “Live Well on 810 a Week To the BAitor ‘ Ma $40 1 agers is gentle “ie fs . HoSeRools), Who have travelled molasses and bulr . If wpecial mention of the superior bringing Mked molet natoes. Andlup of the foreign children over chat of for slothes, outing fanyel can be bought We American children, au UD EX STATE SENATOR SEE! TO GIT uP TO'EM. rae ANY DURN VEAL HEAD CAN BUILD AIR CASTLES. BUT 1T TAKES CONSIDER- ABLE OF A MAN TO BuiLD A LADDER STRONG ENOUGH “However, after a little self study and a few Hamlet's Soliloquies 1 came to the sion that ‘to be or not to beth the question, in: et the q Just so it ever tn “whatt's-the- woman he has LiF husdand kno existence feeling \t | hosen to GO DHROU with keeps up a tirade of at no PROSPECT of ceasing ghtaway tn his brain there passe: WHAT M SHOULD BE his comes HAV ISN" wishe was born, Gradually it ey say he reality he follows the " when the that I settled It 8 y. February 15. 1911, of The Jarr Family | we Mr. Jarr Tells the Story of His Life, 2 08 but Refuses to Fay for the ~an Cy Copyright, 1011, by The Press Iublishing Co, (The New York World), By Roy L. McCardell. |2*". my simple story tales." “Wo must humor hi With a business-like | Mrs. Jari but not spe “Maybe then you will sot want in your book of fairy | HKG affable and well dressed| | I stranger took his seat in the dins ing-room. air he spread be- fore him on the) before. dining-room table] Mrs. Jarr sighed and sock her head. Grhich had noth:| “I suppose we must,’ she said f ing edible upon|don't see why he can't be serious and it at this time| conduct @ business matter in a business save a silver dish of ferns) Als note-| “Well, sald Mr. Jarr, not heeding book, a printed| this gentle critici suppose we begin form ontract to) this way: ‘Like of our great men pay certain sums|of the present tine, Hdward Jarr, the for cortain books! subject of this bio . fest saw the and services to| light of day upon « Perhaps to- ROT PE CARORES ie Great Men at) day he would still oaming the To-day Publishing Company, and a| wilds of Putnam ty, Pa, his joyous large (or calibre) fountain pen—one| bare feet making the earth fat, but for of the deadilest weapons known to mod-| the appearance nthe of his ern times, Juvenile act the family Dory- | “Before we get the data for your | biography, Mr. Jarr,” sald the affable stranger, “we will sign this form. This is the most tmportant thing to do and it nuld be done at once. ‘The offer ‘The| : t Men of To-day Publishing Com of New York, Paris and London’ s, makes {8 mo#t generous; and who knows! “Ww but what they will recognize that the are giving too much, and that only b phora dec nam County ‘I never heard c ata, a Visitation in Put+ a famity!"’ 1 know the f your relations the potato bug, ak of potato bugs when we ‘i Mrs. Jarr. t put him in aske for the vast capital behind them they inning to the would not bo enabled to carry out thelr part of the contract? IT feel sure that | uneastly. these amazing terms cannot be long gills, Me niained, and it were well that t! viether he ninent persons whose names hav «person who t selected to be enrolled In the horitative volut Men of Harlem," an allenist tine was being » 1 ‘pros- bach 1 perverse sense of humor. a e havele ing to do Legs fame!” sald M stouthy, ‘enterprising a An ee nd popu cone f * ald the gentle- den’ ta id Mr. Jarr Tani with these B we previe Were when the toeal paps had been indicted for s : (e minors, And t athe tlghtwad storeke and thelr upper Ips “The Leading Men of Harlem’ is nc tha x ana to be confounded with these crude and the affable s fy conventional conrpiiations of which You | tne ul nnd Tam not oane speak, Mr. Jar,” sald the affable yyssir X t anger. ‘Sign here and we w Py jceed with the data.” And ag a | deadly fountain pen and the ir n 1M a to personal chattel mortgage sere t ’ f MN¢e at Mr. Jarr. vellrt The “Let's got at the data first,” Ww 1 . The Hedgeville Editor By John L. Hobble os KE REYNOLDS was telling us has been depositing mone in his wife's name, but the r vy that 1 of the horseshoe {# turned toward him.) goods you t with him in the morn-| his right mind. ‘Then the woman wonders WHY she s/ tna b ot have very | — neglected. ! y be VERY | At the opera house last night, W. J va But on the other hand every husband e Mies bes Soules wrong when he said that you can foo! part of ve that the woman who knows, jt! hoe meee Or nae —_ to stop, if she tut knew it, has | matt tor 1K HENDERSON says that the greatest trowole ot s vat relatives ¥ to the stuation—ANY ‘situs | Ml f cate te cane | te they usually are not. F |some time in the twenty-four hours of | sae fs as oid. as oo bile Nol the day PARKS anys that he hos no in t " w ne ae shar ane had 11. Yet every hushand KNOWS his mis- G. ing now to acquire an interest tn one woman's premgative | ven ovea: Sevres ay i suffer for it. or, PHIGHT. way, | DAN SCRIB {t is the ambttion of ¢ vans Ww sed a0 ter nust admit that ft ‘ ie well that he will some day be ashamed of the thin wh now D by {ft to the er than DISTRACTED others, really a WOMANISH When you bottom | CU ee HAPPY {t gets ome che and| i | dlstern And by Fiving of $45 yde WD story, the matter of | 7 a hg cent ! story. | PITHER | 3 the other way Who | n this of, grows | proud. 1k house | gown closed lett at the 1 £ the front ts one ! 1 of Tive discourses to the dese: f the newest, z Tet t DREW him Ag soon is ée REVBPRSED, and the clos end ned young " . THAT DRAWS THE | Is and tor IS CHARGED WITH peal Wee vi | of NoE OF ¢ SIDER. | snatl women, ‘The eon pe ATION nike le out in > f ‘" == | ith e ee ‘lections of a % ae 8 | i : < five gored | ed ieans of @ ——— Good Stories eit and. the close By Helen Rowland weer | ihe ee ‘. | . mn id but “ The Real Use a pnd a (oyrabt, 4011, by The Press Publishing Co, (he New York World, me from the county fair the ee ae two residente of the 4 gown is made of ETTING married is 0 casy that moat men are Nie to glance at & glam cwse Fren pereale G suspicious of tt “ ‘ An ideal husband is who ig always around | aa there ts ter when he is needed, and out of the way when he isn’t: we things fall on shine but they only come in novels and in dreams. lin’ "woud fer thar" easine, us the prompt rejoinder of Acvery man ia looking for is one who can fry a steak|t a ther be na powder her nose with the othe k the cradle with wal aac juny herself on the piano. t he iy _ céT\ ID. 70 Half the women in the wortd are trying to prove that Man is an un D in | necessary evil, and the other half are trying to find out how to keep hin ttarorsitl ) No I i at home nights pression reminiscer both amusement aad \ | ao ” aid he was afraid he'd never get owe The lower “clawsses” must settle their marital dipiculties with a broom eye ee ate he i) getting 1t,"" ie a flativon: divorce, ke appendicitis, is a luxury of the well-to-do We al 'have to die rhe es ; 1 Vnow,"” mid the native, “and 1 reminded ; hat fa e told ‘me he never, could In the love game, the man who plays a “system” is sure to come ont a Rega el gmat | tose ause no two women ¢ e “worked” ¢ ¢ ¢ ciple. rar wn yacht t loser, becouse no two women can be “worked” on the same principle stats RANI, CO ERP allan ah (an AAlaa bakes Battorn, Nor 6ea' me | re | si a ished with pointed bands or left loose, 1 # wathered at When vou try to convince your husband that he is the cleverest man on Sull Running. the back and closed with the waist at the \earth he may demur a little at first; bus he'll finally let you have your way VERY oe was a regular at-| For the aixteen year alze will be require ter T inches icici A Mes LRA read ee Ae wide, 4 1-2 yards 96 or 3 1-4 yards 44, with j wide for the ; P ways al the sai trimmmg bands | man who hasn't an entirely new batch of excuses and plenty of eon Patvers Mo, O69 ie cut in sites for girls of 14, 10 and 18 years of age. A “reformer” | her best silk hose, ace in his imagination should marry a grass-widow. is usually a woman who has failed to keep her husband si in the straight and narrow path and is taking it out on the rest of society | | A girl's ankles are never cold so long as she has on all her jewelry and! ning to him t be ain't kotelaa hum pith! THE Lexington Call at BUREAU, mail to MAY MAN‘ ING WORLD MAY enue and Twenty oN PATTERN CO,, A ” Now MANTON FASHION f. third street, or send by : B, Twenty-third street, } } Obtain NX. ¥, Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered ° IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always Pa veil tpecity size wanted, Add two cents for letter postage if in a Urry, | GPP RRAPPPPPPLPOPDIOPPLOOROLDDDL OOP PDD DDE PDP LPL ORDA