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eee ‘bargain counter seems to be over everything. We find it in food | tag all over t ne, Tuesda hy the Press Publishing Compauy Lo. 53 to 63 ereeee Delly Berens Sun “Park Row, New. ¥ » ‘ork. 3. ANGUS SHAW, Pres. and Treas, JOSEPH A eo aL ad See'y. Park Row ere They Are! . By Maurice Ketten. Park Row Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Clase Ma Bu ion Rates to ‘The Evening |For England and the tinent snd | forld for the United States All Counteles in the International end Canada Postal Union. ‘car $3.50 | Ono Year ; vise . $9.78 Sue Month «301 One Month. . on » a Menta VOLUME 51........ — WHERE THE BLAME RESTS. | IVE weeks of deadlock over the Senatorial contest | at Albany has discouraged the hopes of those who saw in the vote of last fall a promise of Democratic harmony on a programme of political reform. It has given the old Republican bosses a revival of xe, At the present time victorious Democracy is wasting its hour of opportunity in a wrangle over the spoils, while the defeated forces of reaction and graft are re-forming their ranks and preparing to make a new fight for the old order of things. Upon whom rests the blame? Some of it is due to Murphy for asserting himself too much; some to Dix for not asserting himself at all. A great deal is due to the pernicious intrigues of the big interests back of the Sheehan candidacy. But in the last analysis the fault lies with the Demo-, cratic members of the Legislature. Theirs is the duty of electing | a Senator worthy of the State. They betray their office when they | betray their party. cour 240 PERSONALITY. IN HISTORY. ENATOR YOUNG of Towa, delivering in the Senate an eulogium upon his predecessor, Senator Dolli- | ver, recalled that Dolliver might have had the nomination for the Vice Presidency at the Con- | vention where Roosevelt was nominated, and re- | peated the old refrain: “Had he taken the office the | course of history would have been changed | Instances of this kind, that seem to show great results flowing from small cause always interesting to the human mind. They open limitless possibilities for speculation, but betray the imaginative into easy exaggerations. The substitution of Dollive McKinley would of course have affected all the surface currents of politics. Men now well known would never have been heard of, while others now obscure would be high in office. But the deeper currents of national life would not have been affected, nor the larger issues changed. Little forces cause little motions. A breeze may raise a tipple on thie sea, but it takes the moon in its orbit to stay the tides. ——$$$+-¢e—______— REVISING THE COMMANDMENTS. ITE purposed revision of the ten commandments has given rise to so little protest or criticism as to occasion remark because it has caused no remark. Most people, indeed, pass it over a& a minor item of news interesting to certain circles, but not to the world at large, a (IT for Roosevelt as the successor to | y,. February 21. 1911. Wives Who Have Made : Their Husbands Famous By Nixola Greeley-Smuh, Copyright, AVIA, vy Lhe tree Pubiisiing Ce. (Lue New dure We No. Hl.<sLady Macbeth. |: What a change in popular sentiment is shown by this indifference to an innovation that in former times would have excited the whole range of theological controversy from religion to bigotry! 2 When it was proposed to translate the Bible from Hebrew and Greck into modern languages everybody in Christendom was aroused Mr. Jarr Ladles Out a Large Dose of lar ‘and Europe fought over the issue for forty years. A few years ago| Covyriaht, 1911, by The Press Publishing Oo, | the world makes the path to success better than that fellow did ft.” ! “4 pe 8 ef r yy iy rates 8 (The New York World.) easy travelling for the man who ts the| ‘Yes, str,"’ sald the young man. the revision of the St. James version of the English Bible started a By Roy L. McCardell | direct opposite of all this.” | “Be punctual and late at the same prolonged controversy, and many churches refused to admit the re- hu yh bs ee “I'M show them!” sald the young man, | time. That ts: be first on the Job in the 7 4 ND now, Harry,” sald Mr. Jarr, | his face lighting up with eagerness and morning and last to quit at nigh! “I'll promise you that, too,"” Now here are a few polnters for, young man. you,” sald Mr. Jarr. I want you tokeep| ‘Next, and this ts very Important, be, in mind everything I say neat in your clothes and person. The young man bowed to signify that | counts, especially in a great city, Take he was all attention. ¢ of your hands and teeth, linen and | vised Bible inside the door. But to-day there is no more excitement over revising the commandments than over breaking them. to the young man who sat by | resolution his desk, while Mr. Jarr signed the letter of recommendation, "LE expect you to make good if you 4 the A eho ON THE BARGAIN COUNTER. RSA : got this Job." “First,” said Mr. Jarr, “start at your |shoes and clothes, Brush up tn ‘your N artist’s model complains of the rivalry of the “You can depend | work in your new position with the firm | work, too. If anything puzzles you, camera, ‘Time was when an artist had to give on me, Mr. Jarr,| resolve that must never falter that there, stick to it till you know how to do it) and I am veryl/is no other man, no other employee the right way. If you have @ letter to employment to a model for long periods of service, grateful to you for} around the place who ts going to do his | write, write as carefully as though you but now he has only to place her in the desired the nice letter you} work as WEA, as you will do yours.|were competing for @ neatly written . : 1 : have written and]|If you @ given another man's work | letter prize.” g pose and take a photograph. Instead of having the kind thinas|to do, even if. but temporarily, do it| ‘The young man was all attention. an engagement for several days of an hour or more | ri you have satd|—— $$$ $$ $$$ ____— ~ ——-—_____—- Hae Pian bad . ri Pov L. MTSE about me. 1 will each, she is dismissed in thirty minutes with a fee of five dollars. try to be worthy ae tt ei eae bir Of course no really earnest artist, who is honest with himself | revly Re ant <i arr fective |. rm sure you wil and his work, be lieves that a photograph oan serve as an effective | 11¢6 4g read, life ts earnest, Marry. A ay abstitute for life. The adoption of the camera, therefore, is a| always remember that it easier to get sort of mechanical means of making art more commercially profituble, | ® Detter Joo when one TAS @ Job than Two years ago it was found in Paris that some artiste were using | has none.” | to get any kind of a position when o: such cheap paints that the colors soon faded. The trail of the |, “Domt ! man, fervently ctions ofa % % % Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland ope Copyright, 1011, by The Press Publishing 9), (The New York World), are | Refle know 1t? the bei said ly youns hus wn for a month try and medicines, and literature and education, ‘The artists’ models | ™¥ to wet work at anything for any 1 ISN'T the man who paints his virtues in three > ‘+ | thing!" have a right to complain, but they are not lonesome. | cdg GAs ot tha bantedt tiinen dncthe I colors and begs her to marry him, but the one who on —— | world to get in when Mr voit paints his sins in vermilion and begs her to him who usually wins the girl. save” sald but Coyly Avoids Using Any of It Himself h Pp our whe ne in * remember, | my boy hat « an be orn withou | Letters From the People {0 ou win sino: Titinenarecirmncemtm erent | ORDO CCDC LOLOL eho and AtRRY Abe to do| Moner and cherish” a woman it gives him a cold shock to wake up and find} Chitaren you the wife can’t nave much out of /#%, But, to get @ position when one that this includes paying for her hats To the Waltor of The 1 & patrolman’s malary, and 1 know what | DAant Tieh and Influential fends and In some respects I agree with “BH.” | I am.tatking about, for I have tried hard |"*lMives 1s most dill The difference between a “drinking man” and a “high liver” is merely | fn regard to the rudeness of snow to do it, only to find chat ft 1s Imposstble app Re renee INE: question of whether he at the corner cafe or elu, ing, but when he talks about "Young ¢o) Tust think uf the hardehing we | 200A! oplal (‘a tough lines to| @ q r he gets it at the corner cafe or ata clu America” being deficient tn manners! nave to put up with, waiting te have to toil simply to exist, and toughe: v5 4nd lauds the children in foreign coun aries, putting off the landlord ant) Still that one has to go around begaing When you consider that anybody who haa a dollar and a few moments les I believe he Js tn Having levery one else. Just imagine the|! jes tees ne on nursing am ae ‘=| to spare can get married, regardless of his character or his income, it see ms| apent several I think | nome where there was need for do Peak oa lng ¢ viithan of thines | almost a shame to take the certificate! 1 am qualified to express an opinion | or medicine, I could write volumes tell- | Veh such belng PEL EAD OF SEMA, | on this subject. In France, noted for ing of the hards patrolma Ifyou OO get th abt vesnt you te cilvairy and et are found some aes ‘3 Wee ate buckle and hold {t, and make If you want a man to propose don't try to make your family coddle him of the most disrespectful children 1 can, I heve seen my own |‘ veers FAI ane son | Make them hate him, because @ man never really “takes hold” until some tions of course). None of the foreia pearaeaet eps poskceay satera val OT ay YT ang ian, who war a? dy begins to pull the other way countries, taken as a whole, can conv : tucked away in |ateady. and endable young fellow, | von up to America in regard Soe patrolman’s salar ‘I'm dependent on my own oxertions, | The grace a nthusiasm with which men make love on the stage is ssow about this, readers rs and seventy-elght ce a i aell cy * ant is a cha » only exceeded by the careless complacency with which they do it in the} show what T can do g A earns that now and o aylo fe, _folicomen’s tx wire tor It Now. you take some more advice | HAP/OF |] OLD POP SHORTS WAS ri sATROLMAN'S WIFE | A reader te!) Patrolman's Wife Whldny; Mavs 47, 1800 are ne f At eight ery girl firmly believes that sume day she will meet a man| TAKEN RSE YI Y pee eg . . Hae a dep ; ates Balke Wak i » J ie ab ta hh who looks like the pictures in the backs of the magazines, Ah, well! | THE SPRING ALMANAC o at policemen have to pay 1 5 bade h 4 HOOd posit erat rusrese ave to Pay was the date Of the Windior | S00" 19 § : 5 its planta saa ARRIVED AND POP 1S DOWN eantN thd bisinees. | Hotel fre Pd. B Mice * ; | TWENTY TWO NEW man oes into the busi i boven wen Wisdom of the Ancients, ||| WIHTWE hasn't a bank account and consequel In the World Almanag t and inte Tha | AILMENTS ae he goes into debt the first year { Pine ratitor ot ‘Tho Eve yeen told by 1 0. n (Juvenal) ; everything he has to get. His salary is Where can I find @ st legal | to others that t and co: e prescribed to himself “BY the verdict of his own breast no fore he has finished pay! off the out of New Y WILLIAM 1D. Wh an emp m1 firm a cor ered th huss Dus shame once ae bill he has to get an et of To Board of Kan a. poration realize {thas aman who, banished from his now hardened brow ATURE has given us tears! Of all forms. To the Baitor of ‘The Evening World his employer at — our feeling this ts the noblest part, He naturally hos a wife and family Vhere can | apply to obtain informa a trust and promotion I" you deserve to be accounted a man se fo, between paying rent. gas, erning employment of teach The fact that there are of mame! integrity and stanch BT nothing shocking to eyes or e butcher, grocer, baker and milkman (2 > cra y New Yor City? 8 HR ny shiftless, incompetent, careless, Jlove of Justice, both in word and deed, approach those doors that lo! counting sometimes @ doctor's bill), Newark, N. J, | unworthy, dull aod unwilling workers in then J hail you the tur pobleman, upon your obild, Advice oo “Be Johnny - on -the- Spot. Prompt, painstaking. He dignified and reserved. Make no friendships in the office and | get in no feuds. It is our friends who ean hurt us more than our enemies, any way. Untt! such time as you can go 0} to dunch with the boss, go out alc Avoid falling 4n love until your position brings you into contact with a father in-law that {t {s worth while to have Bachelorhood 1s a great asset for a young man, When you cash tt, see you ket a bigger value in return. But, above all, do better work, more careful work than the other fellow, and train your nd mind to avold mistakes and to see suggest {mprovements, and don't fo: that while promotion may be slow It wi be sure.” 111 do everything you say, Mr. Jar," | remarked the young man, “because I know you know what you are talking about.” "You bet I 4 ea Mr, Jarr. “If 1 had followed my own advice I'd be run- ning this joint now instead of being a poor old helpless hack, and a failure alt | | around.” od | n the Tall Timbers | tation of the witches he knew what he would have to do But he wanted some | make his wife his cons | ambition in the blood of those who stood between him and ite realization, | with cepes and white wine sauce—epatant, madamet HPRE is no doubt that many of the ladies whom T shall Include av a wives who have made their husbands far Will object to the of Lady Macbeth. That is why Iam taking her so early Eve was a broad minded soul, and be alone in the rden of Eden could not cultivate ings of social br me is ha al superiority. Wor | t the ving inferiors, and not merely eing superior, who cares for clavsifleation enjoys. woman Helen of Troy was never in the least narrow during her lifetime and can't afford to be now, ho come afte: Lady Mac il have the priv vying out of the series if they consider r associates We have only Sha for 0 eption of the strong, purposeful worr made her vacillating hus- band Kir But 1 would rather day in the year Macbeth ‘was a drifter, the so things happen jgstead of making them happen. ‘The witches Rreeted him with “Hall, King that s this strong hint from the Fate themselves automatically to their prophecy n him how t uind would serve his ambition. Rut be sure that Macboth had already thought about the murder himself, Women are franker with themselves and possibly less frank with each other than men are. i In his sou! Macbeth know, as all those who woo succes: (hing happens {f you merely sit down And watt for it Sah aN { Waiting for loral Scapeg: \ ene = Probably before he said anything to Lady of Scotland believe 1 poet than @ historian any t#of person wito lets ve" and notwithstanding it have assumed that events would shape if his more practical wife had not. of King Duncan, then on his way to visit them, must know, that lacbeth about the disturbing exiw ‘one else to formulate it. He realized, as many another married man has, that to nce was to have @ moral scapegoat securely tethered in the back yard of this soul. There may be thirteen original jokes. There may be thirtystx dramettc aite- ations, But there never has been, and ever will be, but one excuse from man to his maker: “The woman that Thou gavest me tempted me. Lady Macbeth merely voiced the temptation that was in her husband's eout, as many million wives after her have done. She made him pay the price of his If she had not shown him how to do it, !f she had-not let him delieve that he was merely the instrument and not the originator of @ terrible crime, he might never have been King and the protagonist of one of the world’s re he dramas as well. He would have lived and died a petty Thane and his name would have bese unknown to the generation which came after him. With our modern distaste for murder we may not consider Macbeth’s tame desirable. But we have to admit that his wife made t just by having the courage of his secret hopes. “All the World’s a Stage.” (Little Comedies of Every Day.) By Alma Woodward. Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). The Missus Lunches Downtown—With Hubby! Torton’s Restaurant 12.45, P. ‘3 (At rise of curtein Mr, and Mra Brown ese erated at amall table {Re fom Mrs. Browa, enraptured vuried, sone 1 Bae eet Re pie Mr, ‘Brown ia" vagus ity gern Making “dueer, albllant ips, in the hope of att ng at least one waiter). ms Ls i e oe RS. B. (sweetly)—What are you making so much fuss about, Jahn—we don’t have to catch @ train! Mr, B, (pulling out his watch)—It's a quarter to one now—I can’t waste all dey here! It's my hebdit to take only fifteen minutes for duneh Watting (rushing up)—Out, monsteur—out, monsteurt Mr. B. (picking up menu)—Well, what are you going to eat, Carrie? ‘Mrs. B. (gurgling)—Oh, don't hurry me! There are such divine things on this bill-of-fare! Let's take our time, darling! Mr. B. (vaguely)—I have an appointment at the office at— Waiter (tactlessly)—Monsteur {s usually not tn such a hurry! (Mr, B, glares at the offender—there is the lust for sudden bloodshed tn bts eye) Mrs. B GARCONG? Watter (with Gall (smiling soulfully at the walter)—What would you recommend, intensity)-Ah, madame! A little sweetbread Cavalient— Mrs. B, (temperamentally)—Don't that sound perfectly heavenly, John? Walter (coaxingly)—A lobster cocktail first, perhaps, ‘1, madame—t @ green pepper, delicieuse! Mrs. B, (rolling her eyes)—The man's a genius! Walter (in his element)—An artichoke vinaigrette and Julienne potatoes! Mrs. B. (in a trance)—Yes—yes! Mr. BR. (in stentorian accents)~Bring me a piece of roast beef, @ Daked po- a cup of coffee and a plece of custard pie. Mrs, B. (with dismay)-Oh John, why do you eat those things in @ restaurant at home all the time? Why don’t you try something dainey, when you get th something, you know-—er-(gesticulates vaguely) Waiter (quietly) RECHERCHE, perhaps, madame wishes to say? Mrs. B. (beaming bovinely)—Oh, thank you! Yes, that's what T wanted to sey! Mr, li, (ooking to see that the dial 4@ still on his timeptece)—Hurry that up now, George! (Walter disappears. Mra, B. settles back in her chair with @ sigh of absolute co! Mr. B. consumes three rolls and two pats of butter). Mrs, H, (reprovingly)—My goodness John! No wonder you don't have any appetite when you fill in on bread! Mr. B. (coldly)--Bread 18 about the cheapest filler you can get~I haven't pata , remember! on Why do you always remind me of unpleasant things when Mrs, i. I'm out enjoy Wa stall before her, She attacks tt with avidity, ‘There {s 4 profound, unbroken silence as she devours the choice meal, morsel by morsel) Mr. B. (for the t ne)—Got to get @ hustle on, Carrie, I only have five minutes to get back to the office! Mrs, B. (with her mouth full of Ne if you make me eat any faate (Waiter presents check—$i40—Mr._B. recovers n effort and coi elrode pudding)-I'N have terrible in- suffers a series of heart palpitations, up with the coin), Mrs, H, (putting on her gloves)--Well, next time you want to take me to lunch give ME the and I'll go eat alone—I'll have to go right into a drug store and take s bonate of a—you rushed me so! Mr. B, (in aside)—Next tim: , What @ chance! IRTAIN. ——— The Day’s Good Stories His Share in It. Couldn't Think of It. acconling HE handsome young plumber laid aside a assertio piece of lead pipe and aching had longer itclien maid, Bunn, wh man who] "I ain't got no tin ou wee I'm busy? Yea; w ¢ to listen to you now. Car 1} when | u's the use workin’ when a tei mare, and he j wants to make lore to sou? Say, if 1 make I stecred. dat | $ob Inst eo 1 can ‘come back tormomow will. yoni coke woriek LOE aca 9048 act! btte mata dat hack tpeel ler Rhian tier you te ats 1 want pid ke He Took the Blame. UGUST HERRMANN. the ne A alted Ruler of Elia. ee : 1 Detio' gives himself away, for, | cy rimsit evar. tor,| Fresh-Water Leviathan. GENTLEMAN was strolling across a large water A tnake love to me come amu I’) bw here,’ sou my own time? you think Iam? jee! What kind of Chicago Resor estate when he cate upom a man fishing, ved he t “What sort of fish do you catch here?"* flan abe Maa Joined FA | ead nite th TI flashed her bright eves over ostly trout" replied the man, Fane ae Taco with a | <cHow many have vou caught! “About ten or twelve, sir. the sigh Isu't the water blue, today ny Us about fhe hearin you have caugh¢?"* titer astie shame tem “ia ohvys wasay’ sph Dug. "Wa Dawfaagiy her show tolling fedos!” runs! —-Wastlagioa Stas, oun