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& ANGU inner leg Ie “ Che Published Dally Fxeont Sunday, » "ar! s Ph ds Pros. and ‘1 rk’ Row. Entered at the Post-Office at N —_—— ¥ bene: | ye oe and Canada Rates to The York aa Sccond-Cla r ‘or England and t ‘ tall One Year One Month Countries tn the Trtera MEPHISTOFHI LES THE MOCKER, istopheles. ! ASHINGTON despatches say Senator Aldrich, from the seclusion of Jekyl Island, has sent word to the siand-pat Senators not to worry over the proposed reciprocity with Canada, but to step qu and let the insurgents kill it. “his sounds like counsel straight from the lips of tly aside Nor is the intent and purpose of it unworthy of that @ocker at virtue, for the design is not merely to kill reciprocity but to Gisperse insurgency itself into the musty nothingness of things that Perhaps the design will be fulfilled. Where now i & the insurgent fore at shouted for the old moralities? Where is he that Geratoga raging for the scalps of crooks, swearing he would sooner @tarve than banquet with the bosses? Senator Aldrich is about to lay atide his office and his ostensible @edership, bi move the marionettes. 0 te PLEAS FOR THE BOWERY. ROM the Bowery of Inte there have come many protests against the scheme to put additional elevated tracks alongside the present ones, and something in the way of a demand that when any extensive change is made in the elevated road the tracks shall be moved from the sidewalks to the centre of the street. Neither the protest nor the demand is unreasonable. of Inst fall? Where is tho Osawata rX¥ @ orator went to ut he appears to retain his acumen and his ability to Eventually @ redeemed and beautified city may see both of them granted, for the elevated roads were permitted to dominate it. Once upon a time the Bowery was more beautiful than Broadway. At another period it was the centre of politi fallen upon evil days. @hould be made to respect. The people of Europe submit to that burden because a thousand years of national and racial jingoism have filled their minds with | batreds and jealousies and made them the slaves of militarism and} kings: But why should Americans with open minds and free eRe take upon themselves the useless and wasteful burden of more bat- @eships, more military pensions and the fortification of the Panama anal? President Taft, ex-President Roosevelt, Mr. Carnegie and others ef their kind are loud in commending Count Apponyi at public inners, but at the same time they demand more expenditures for wa. e+ APPONYI AND HIS HOSTS. OUNT APPONYI says: “The people of bear the burden of an annual military expenditure of $1,500,000,000 in times of peace. They shrug their shoulders control.” and sigh over it, but they submit to it as to soine law of nature beyond their ote GERMAN BALLOON ENTERPRISE. Memmae ERMAN enterpris or April, nents wi power. Now it has But still ite residents have rights that railways By way of putting the twentieth century stamp upon the “nt the balloon | at its launching was christened not with wine nor | with water, but with a bottle of liquid air! American, British and French interest in aviation has been go | targely directed toward expe | the Bowery is well worth preserving as a thoroughfare of the “boule- , ward” type. It is broad enough, important enough and histori @nough to merit much better treatment than it has received sine: Europe is to make the adventure of |é crossing the Atlantic with a dirigible balloon some | time in Mare! heavier than air machines | that comparatively little attention has been given to the balloon work on the other side the Rhine. get into the news, The proposed voyage will re fies. The Germans have had no pl rigible goes to smash, does any cor @uccesses of the past two years the Atlantic the triumph will he enormous Cote by ot eeeuiatin Atter exes 0 @een in storage one year | @re about as ¢ be And five not to make much differer author of the bill ®enerous an food product fun for thei The ¥ Geld Storage and Old Age, nd ws think the adly as they ever Bt as Ww ¢ Ca © embal Ss a fair show x readers, wiat su with acco disaster” sibility of « ing, I would marks my compa st Tennessee, 1, plodding through the loaded down Onl 1 ‘al t all of note in the g If now they succeed To the F ‘6 We notice t mind n it up and We t tt 1 is 0 jat what time he leaves fo every morning, and a leaves the office for h to take advantage of report of the matter now and then, when some | re a study of the dirigible possibili A Truly Generous Ofer, did sho answer WSTERDAY T was tn a dep: Rov b. RI CARDELL It Based yy @ purchase, 1 waited whit nthe dark] “Would you, Marie, if 3 me?” \ clu tocwet @ rAlie, Tfeal aural’ street with saddened visage. | “Well, I don't know; it all depends,” He didn sure, but he thought “I waid you was?" remarked “If you think the goods wouldn't shrink, I'd have tt Mr. Jarr coming over to whe 6 sat dyed, It would make a nice ¢ = wra enkyie ear ints be aang and kissing on her half-averted “What color would you have 1t7 1 when he dies he'll surely leave it } on “1 thinks pale apple-green would go well with your com-|to us, We'll send Willle to college and “1 suppose you care a great deal how plex we'll go abroad and stay a year and I’! te gald Mrs. Jarr in a doleful But apple-green 8 ly bu the finest clothes they have in tone. “Well, then, may y ‘ that? Ye Beauty | i} Hi. Changed i By Maurice Ketten. History By Albert Payson By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), 1] 35.—A Single Vote That Saved a President. F a single Senator's vote had been cast differently, the world at large would have been treated to the amazing spectacle of a United States President convicted of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” This would have been a scandal without precedent and a danger | ous weapon to hold over future Presidents. The man who thus escaped by one vote was Andrew Johnson, a Presl- | dent who was never elected, a general who was untrained to war, a states- man who violated many rules of statesmanship. Added to these paradoxes he had two other doubtful claims to notoriety, First, he was the only Presl- dent ever impeached. Second, that he was too drunk to speak platnly in delivering his Vice-Presidential address, Here is his rather dramatte stor’ Johnson was the son of a North Carolina se His father died when the boy was five. Andrew {s said to have by streets to support his widowed mother. At ten he was apprenticed to a tailor. At fifteen he smashed the windows of a nelghbor’s home and left town to dodge the police, He then worked as 4 tallor in South Carolin: at Gr nville, Tenn. In 1826, when he was only seventeen, he married 1) MoCardle, a pretty fifteen-year-old Tennesse girl SHE IS SUPPOSED BEA | NEVER SAW FAMOUS BEAUTY ANS Gar, INN THIN Ge ay, puri ovr’ Beau Tet THINK MUCH OF HER FACE 2 1 FAIL To SEE . SHE'S THE Most nt even write. He BeauTiFUL Bea j ’ MAN IN THE Fre MAT HER NOSE ISA WORLD. | oF THE rite Yi WOMAN IN LITTLE Too SKoeT (DON'T THINKS Se Uy ICAN'T SEE IT Te =e ee ay When he was married he could had learned to read a few simple words, but had never The Tallor Who been taught writing or arithmetic, He was, in fact, as Became President. iterate as most six-year-old children, His wife educa- ted him The man had ability, pluck and boundless ambition, He went in for politics, npioning the worki le's cause. During the next forty years he had served in turn as Alderman, Mayor, Assemblyman, State Senator, Presidestal Elector, Governor, Congresman, United States Senator, Brigadier-General, Milluary Governor of Tennessee, Vice-President and President of the United States; occu pying nearly every office in the gift of the nation When the civil war began, Johnson—thouch he was a Southerner—stood gat- lantly by the Union, As a reward he was burned in effigy, his slaves were con- fiscated, his house mobbed, his sick wife and daughter were turned into the Street and a price was set on his head. To atone fot this treatment by his Sout! ern neighbors, Lincoln made Johnson Military Governor of Tennessee. In the North he was looked on as something of a marty:, and (in spite of the fact that he was a Democrat) he was elected Vice-President on the Republican ticket in 1864, when Lincoln was chosen President for the second time. Lincoln was shot soon after the Inauguration and Johnson became President, Trouble set in. It was an era that called for perfect statesmanship. The civil war had just ended. Only the hand of @ genius could satisfactorily rebuild the shattered Union and accomplish the mighty task of healing the war wounds that had so rept the country. Johnson was not a genius. At once he and Congress clashed. Johnson, who had once been Secession’s bitterest foe, now wanted the South- ates readmitted to the Union as fast as they should apply for such admie- «insisted that those States could not come back to the Union with- lations Then Johnson issued @ proclamation forming “provisional AWG 8 See PERFECTLY Be IN “Aut a T% B E AU T ) FU ae governments" for the Southern States, Congress retaliated by passing a bill which ANGELS? admitted al! Southern freedmen to full citizenship. Johnson promptly vetoed this (CAN NOT Dill, and Congress passed it over his veto. on went around the country making speeches he denounced Congress, Congress continued 5 and condemned his acts of to nis plan of recon- Congress carried A Clash and Its Climax. ting the na: ts own plan to Vicvory, against his consent. ia This sort of thing reached a climax in 193, when the House of, Representatives passed a resolution that Johnson be impeached for “high crimes and misde- meanors in office’; the chief counts against him being alleged “usurpation of power” and his public speeches against Congress, Excitement A high, It | was one of our country’s historic moments. | To convict Johnson, a two-thirds Senatorial vote was needed. tn the Senate | the vote (on one article of the indictment) stood as follows Guilty—85. Not gullty—19. Thus by a single vote he escaped conv The disappointed ‘majority would not give the President the satisfac 1 full acquittal, They adjourned indefinitely, without taking vote on 8 of the impeachment. Mr. Jarr at Last Discovers the One and Only The Modern Atlas. Knock-Out Punch for an Attack of the Blues Kop A eet adiedin ts telling a story which hay nctent history clase the other day. MAAAOAAAAAPOPOCCOCODAASCPECECCCELLOLING | sewn wan. Atlant” the teacher askel Copyrlgit, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, | soon be ripe!” sald ipere! eked Mere dare. cate ane ‘ | who was a 0 win prMigit, 1011, by The Pee Publishing Co, J goon be ripet"* sald Mr. } asked Mr. Jarr, "I don’t carey “Anybody worrying you? Anything Leaps SPE 8. Mrs. Jarr took the By Roy L. McCardell. [ripening of ones 6 ELL, how're you feeling, old| ture with no perc cheerfully Into tt se the other/ pee na Ten Roads for a answered the child. he supperted the world, did he?" maam, who enpported Atiagt”? eek. | The scholar was Jew for @ mom she | after « little thought said “1 gucas pave married a rich w ladelphia Tim lee eet Joke Wesn’ ‘ton H' m Tm hungry." “If ail you think of your home ts the | meals xe it, go out and pay have for sup- | your trude!"* And a a | ng me, every- said Mrs. Jarr. | down her of anyth! ng you?” he a! everybody We isn't on me." Seats Abita Only “wo Kinds. ITTLE LAWRENOR'S & or was very it and a tra had been emplose t Why, everything is all right!” cried Kdward Jarr, optimist fa en lie became conva’ «mr tel { Happy Business Woman ‘ Sno PRER ym ate reet_ ner By Sophie irene Loeb vo got a new dress and a new hat 3 — |1 think we | Mrs. Jarr aid not > lucky kK He would would mount turned the key’ In the look and antured/ ot einen | The Commercial Gabfest. ar nS picture of the k so, evidently, ts failed tu rise at the pleas- esent that Mr. Jarr described, Whereupon he presaged the ture glowingly etore. I stopped at a counter to make > young women discoursed as follows: | t would cheer her.) “But And, would you t up until they saw RUPTED-Us" WHAT IS IT, E > tim 1 4s such t talk foollsh!” sald Mrs. Jarr n you see I'm not feeling well, » you come and make fun of me We'll neve ter off than we are Things are only going from bad At conversi , t, when or saying with a “HOW-YOU-HAV “On, of talking like "Yes 1 do. ries wi i Ww lot of other In the Tall $) 2 andy ed to 80 ¢ nee Tie tans . w 1 n my way, boss is worrled ath about busines: Timbers ‘ girl in bi NHlh wits was: anouEecat eat ——~ tion t t 0 me her wa N iT A And her dre ak disappoint- it © est AT THE TIME A © Sol on a s her about three new dre 1 saw ‘ an A Rut there ts the TIME and PLACE girl 1 Th s. Jarr sat up and took notice place may at times be right “on the job," but that is not the case at all 1 tryvers!” continued Mr. i ' rs being sued for fraud | The rotd for a happy business woman may re-echo with the momentary stook swindling. It's to get in hat, but business MOVES ON and is NOT stopped in its path by it papers and ruin him, and he may on essity in the eomunercial nas real bust 1 havo nosympathy for those Airy. ' * cre 18 no progressive employer who does not realize the actual | Vers Not one bit!" sald Mra, Jarr, who runs her business away will live to run another way, The slogan @ been slok & Week and tha s locked his pay, Mrs, Gote eft her husband and is suing him and has attached his money und his. property, i always said thi 1 always sald found him ou | “First comes the intercst of the wagepaye During HIS time t e is no right for any other, 1 e wrongs HERS r who | » under the delusion that wh doesn't KNOW doesn't hurt him. Is ever awake and has eyes that ney sphinx or a dead man ! Well, I'm glad sald Mrs. Jarr, ummy in this wide world, t eep the wires of ind ‘pean | Awe ly working overtime to figure out ways and |... 4 Mrs, Hickett was down to eee i of LABOR that there be more time for ot! to-day,” Mr, dare wept on, “She viditions that help to bring hope to the heart and make the Wants to et a on her little prop pee mn Long Island; but {t's already For ALL work and NO play makes Jill.a very dull girl, Yet NO work \cayily mortgaged, That worthless son and much to say will drive the customers away. of hers ts ted for passing bad 6, it behooves you and me, who work, to FORGET about last night | cheeks again.” | at at the time when we must needs | “And the Mudridges, who are always | n ft is duce talking about their Incomes — their g rntte ney is all ted up in the bank fail- Five Gored Skirt with Two-Plece Tunic,—Pattern - wos fora | OLD POP SHORTS SIGNED THE PLEDGE YISTERDAY AND THE VERY FUST THING SPILED HIS WIFE'S NEW DRESS A BLOWIN’ THE CREAM OFF'M A ons when we are “just dying to tell Marie some- t nent il ; sald Mrs, Jarr, No. 6943 4, 2, 2, 80 and 8 thing. © moment will present itself WITHOUT the need of stealing | Y ta lo. g inch ‘wa easur GLASS OF MILKe aus, it ast that As the great worker sald lle who steals my golden thme takes “The you sald Mr, dart. | ~ Le ‘ < something more precious than the momentary dime “Other people are a lot worse off than Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY PASON , o FLIBS| ¥e 8 He meant that when inattention comes in at the counter, trade FLIES) rey sere apr, brightening up, OUT of the door “it isn’t sueh a bad old world after all!" BUREAU, Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or send by mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 182 E. Twenty-third street, N. Y, Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern or Some truth that! Put yourself in the other's place | And after dinner the Jarrs went to the IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always Therefore the road for a happy business woman is paved with punctuality | theatre and joyed themselves im- specify size wanted. Add two cents for letter postage if in ao at ve e of need. m hurry, sely and Mrs. Jarr has been in the TION AND ALERTNESS ARE THE ASSETS OF REAL REWARD, | best of spinite ever since, Wat Ye ne