The evening world. Newspaper, March 18, 1911, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

= —— Che Ges Be astorio. Published Dally Except Sund: b ihe r Fublishing Company, Nos. 53 to 6% J. ANGUS SHAW, Pres, and JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, See'y fi 64 Park coond- Class Matter. nd and t Continent and es in the International . $ One Month VOLUME 61...... 00. NO. 18,106 INT PATRICK’S FESTIVAL, \NY a generation has passed since the festival of Saint Patrick was celebrated with 60 much of unity and of hopefulness on the part of all Irisa , men and women as was the case yesterday. By the h processes of historic development the celebration of Y, the day has become the expression of a racial and a Tational aspiration even more than a religious one, and now the Irish race can see on the horizon of the near future the dawning of 4 day when Ireland shall have home rule and be, if not au independent nation, at least a free aud self-governed state, In his message to the Irish of the United States, published yes terday, John Redmond forecast not only home rule for Ireland, b great democratic reforms for England, Scotland and Wales aa well. In his address at St. Patrick's banquet in London he went even fur- ther and predicted that through “the treaty of peace with Ireland” there would come for Great Britain and America a harmony of purpose that would make for the peace of the world. These are high sounding promises, yet not out of proportion to the hopes inspired by the spirit of the day. $+ WHEN OFFICIALS ARE GUILTY. OBIN’S s{atements, or confessions, in connection with the investigation of the Carnegie Trust Com- pany are clearly designed to bencfit himself. There- fore they are to be accepted only so far as they are eupported by other and less biased testimony. It Dalry seems, however, to be probable that the company was wrecked by a sort of combination or coalition of financiers that included among its members not only promoters and bankers but off- cials of the city government and some person or persons 80 close to the State Banking Department as to be able to give warning when an examination was impending. This is one of the ugliest features of the scandal. Swindling | operations of unscrupulous promoters and rascalities of dishonest Lankers are bad, though the public can be largely protected from them if good laws ate enacted and honest officials enforce them. But if public money be used to promote dishonest schemes, and public offi- Is connive at violations of law, the evil becomes one of the first magnitude and calls for drastic measures of redress. This phase of the case, therefore, should be probed to the bottom. No guilty offi- cia] should be allowed to escape. + CONSIDER THE BABY. ’ | SA UT of the evidence given in the trial of Kdith Melber at Albany for killing her five-year-old son | there comes a conviction not only of the mother but of society itself. 1t appears the woman made repeated efforts to get some asylum or orphanage or society to take charge of the child, but none would do so, Private charity and public institutions alike rejected the burden. The argument of justification in the matter is of course obvious. To accept children in such cases would be to encourage mothers to sbandon their offspring. It is quite reasonable that a woman,strong enough to work ought to take care of her children, or at least con- | tribute something to that end. But such arguments are valid only against the mother. The | child was not to blame. A five-year-old boy, hardly more than a baby, should not be turned out of an asylum solely because his unnatural mother docs not make the weekly payments required. Had George Melber been a grown thief, drunkard, beggar or pauper either law or charity would in some way have taken charge of him. Being a baby, with a weak mother, neither gave him shelter. -¢o——___— HARLEM BARBERS. ARLEM barbers have adopted resolutions in favor of various movements of interest to the trade, but protesting against the passage of a bill introduced in the State Le! » providin ment of a commission of five examiners at $2,000 a year each to supervise the shops and the busi- ness of barbers. The protest is valid. We reasons could be given for abolishing the ‘creation of others. to cleanliness, sanitary regulations, working hours, shops can be enforced just as well by existing State c thorities as by a board of commissioners or examiners for the appoint- have Better than for may be enacted with respect &e., in barber municipal au- commissions enough some that we hav Such laws os The Evening World Daily Magazine. | | By * “The Flowers That Bloom in the Spring, tra la!” AAD AN TBM Be Saturday! Py Confessions Of a Mere Miran Transcribed By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1011, by The L'ress Publishing Co, (The New York World), Different Brands of Love. 4M in love again—for the first time! In fact, every time is “the first time’ with ma, because love, like lightaing, Bever strikes me twice in the same piace, nor in the same way. Every new love is a totally different brand from all that have gone be fore. That's the beauty of variety in love or wine, Your taste ducated to @ finer appreciation, and each time you discover a new brand—or a new gitl—you honestly be eve that you have at last found the reat thing. As for me, each new love 1s a turn around the corner, an excursion Into a deiightful, unknown land. 1 am eters nally seeking the “golden girl,” and when I find her £ shall not be surprised, nor shocked. 1 have preserved the perennial freshness of my heart by going into each ana every love affair with the genuine conviction that 1 AM is love, Most men nowadays either wear all the edge thelr sentiment and emotions by constantly indulging in the imitation variety and making love to every woman they meet, merely out of habit, or else they are so mortally afraid of falling im love that they can only be surprised into it when they arent on the lookout. They stumble into it they would into @ trap in tho dark. They are so busy tep right back under the wheels and are fatally mangied. Belleve me, old chap, trying to dodge love Is like taking a country cut across Fifth avenue on a busy morning; while you are backing away from one auto moblle~or one gitl—another runs you down. You can't be looking all ways at once. It's best to take love, like @ wave, head on, and cut right through 6 ‘Then you can either Moat in your folly or come out on the other side safe—ané ane. Yes, I know it's exceedingly difficult to distinguish between “real love” am@ the imitation or “near? commodity, But—ah, well!—all love is “real love’ while it}: ‘There are fifty-seven varieties of it, and each is w totally different sort of “picki ‘There's the sweet and simple kind that we cet @ taste of before we are ous t school; the kind that manifests itself in bad poetry and pipe dreams and carrying souvenirs about in your left vest pocket, That is our kiudergarten edu. ; vation, And there's the tobasco brand that comes Jater; and the spicy brand that manifests itseif in hanging around stage doors and guing broke, and the mixed kind, and the straight Kind, and the fancy kind, aad—oh, well, you probe | ably know them ali by heart, But the best of all kinds is the mixed kind, the chow-chow vartety, composed of sugar and pepper and spice and romance and friendship combined, the kis@ which hits you all over! One man has called it “Love with « capital 1,” aa@ another has called it “friendsnip set on fire. I only Know that it is different from all other kinds of love in the world Believe me, until you can love a Woman as a mother and a friend and a pal and an angel and @ sweetheart al! in one—you have never ‘ound the best brand of love. Yet you never can tell what any sort of love ts going to make you do. More crimes have been committed in the name of “love” than in the names of justios, war and religion all put together. There's the kind that makes @ chap run after @ girl, and the kind that makes him run away from her; the kind that makes him inarry her and keep her slaving for him for the rest of her life, and the kind that makes him renounce her and leave her to pay her own bills for the rest of her life, | There's the kind that drives him to drink, and the kind that reclaims him from it; the Kind that kesp him drudging at the cffice for a woman, and the kind that keeps him tagging at her heels while his business goes to ruin, In short, LOVE js the universal masculine excuse for every folly or crime, | from going without a shave to breaking into a bank. But the most astounding, {he marvelous, the mystical part of it is that, after a man has tried fifty-sir | varieties, he can still stand up with a clear conscience and a perfectly straight face and teil the fifty-seventh girl that he “never really loved before! And that’s woy I say that 1 am in love again—for the frst time! Maurice Ketten. 4 I : ——'| The Week’s Wash. DEO AAA ILAA RM AARAR AAA NARARAARARAARARA RADA ADAAAAANAAAAAAADRANADY A Heartsick Stranger Graces the Jarrs’ Table And Volunteers the Tragic Story of His Life.}\« Copyright, 1991, by The L’ress Publishing Oe, (The' New * World), (make: on his frat vist: and his last. beg parton! | By Martin Green. Copsright, 111, by The Wress Publishing Co. (The New York World). HO says the Legislature 1s) W loafing on the jod?" asked the head polisher. “Here' the Assembly has put over @ bill’ . “is whose mother needs the money for rea. cleans up his compantons and ru home with bis winnings, For Sunday recreation as oetween craps and base ball the Legislature gives three cheers "is | The guest, who had @ large and ex-; “Mamma!” cried the little girl sud- | What did you/tremely red nose, had been sitting at! deny, “why doesn’t the gentleman 7, t rohibiting the 1n-/ for craps. By Roy L. McCardell. |* Ked Mr. Dinkston, rousing up.|the table, from the time the children! bis tomato instead of smelling it?” Peuledtar ee thls p re ‘ Twas asking ©ou {f you would have; had entered the room till now {nm @ Mr, Jarr choked off a laugh b he a fe i FRIEND of your papa laugh by cough fair city from got. Ce END cohaimed Mra jase |Your coffee now; and £ think, papa'—|mustng attitude with hls thumb and ing and turned on the ligat. Mr. Dinks fale oi, Sree New Fleld for Con Men. sweetly to the children, after! t28 to Mr. Jarr—"you had better ‘urn/ finger to the swollen and scarlet nasal | ton took nis finger from his nose hastily. | shined after thr! ? - she had pointed| oP the light. or |The children, seeing it was a nose and | Yelock on Sunday | 66] _‘"0%8 the way things ‘are coming out Master Wille Sot edretc gs " ” ie: seuss ~~ ee — | mot @ tomato, giggled and kicked each ternoon.”” fb out in the Carnegie Trust Com- Jarr, aged cight, other under the table in thelr childish ‘Some class to} pany jnvesugation,” remarked and Miss Bama Glee. legislation -1ike| te head polisher, “it would appear that Jarr, uxed five, 10 “No coffee, er—er, thank you!” mut- , Commented te geen goods .nd con men are mak- ie. ‘Dinkatoa, e browe bro OTS} | torea ste. Dintcscon’ “aust waver, pinta ley, man, | 88 A Mistake Working Lae Fudea, ‘They Mr. Jarr did no: | water.” { Mit gives the poor, t to #hift to the iinancial district,’ deay ‘the charge H i d L “Water?” asked Mr. Jarr in surprise, doth eodden mn iack a chence to nave! “Well,” said the laundryman, “they'd \ ‘ v the > Mra.) 55 that,” sahil Mr. Dinkston, ‘There ts « at deal of legislation 2 cop tae hepa bapa bad pare pee il By Irvin S. Cobb. prevalence of typhoid, and in water of direction of keeping the % so; | pion In this and oveey other eiky /eeleHey (a eal clatined winsitp co e clearest crystal the deadllest germs pie {rom Sunday toll, Tue boys aad with the sofe: rks (nat ever broke the best on Lota Cop 11, by The Mess Publishing Co, (The New York World). | may jurk, But 1 fad that a Mttle— inen Who keep the machinery | into money Pov L MeeaRpEm sides of the fa s Aha i | anem—a litue of spirits—ahem—in the through the week a ed to And friendsn.y with the more pre O) PARA ETREE COU sc Pul ole benders tram acath Meh eas gh wale | water will—will— Yee, thank you, No, |rect on Sunday, able and prosperous of thelr acquaint: | Saking part In the Mexican revolute ie apameacayy’! 1 can help myself." “Any legislator will tell you tha: ances. To these unfortunate youths my heart goes oats RISE HDeY ny. ‘\ vour pers| APd. Re. took the bottle Mr, garr|Some of shec will even admit tha Mr. Dinkston, alas, was neither very He ee eae aad eo ra vonto, My idea of «| Datsed again from the «idebosrd and| Working mon and boys are entitled ¢) presentable nor prosperous. ‘The chil- pitating heart and WE te Ve * uhh che soes rampaging | Milled every germ that might lurk in | #9%0 amusement on Sunday, 1 dren saw the one circumstance and poor sport Is an impetuous American who &9 BORIS | stiespoueial of wits Le aarti CAS ay MOLD igh sinsed the other. Children and dogs across the border t fal Ap somebody else's fase aH ie | “No, 1 will heif myself,” added Mz, /# bil allowing amateurs to T ' eno u calls on his Uncle juel to save him when he gets caught! A " y . ded 3 ave ne - CT Re ERE ee ety with the goo for the native vora peon| Pinkston. “I must not be any en persons of dingy appearan M ithe wood ° bia a ule ¢0vou lecys ihacare have orned Jar 4 Miss Jarr eyed the gues: | WE) and his wile ute, ‘That's tneis | oun to yon rave D8 SURiOORARGRnOn Gb hel day omewha: askance and eviaced ny ea / business. As long at carries a Fagus sans | Ue new > 8 RR ch nus does @ wise and beniga L \ nian de mato business on thustasm for his company. poor in the union and obeys the eight-hour law he has my per-} seine ty y Be rine scuee ee small cap jing money le pub err yeu bare ait akee muih your f iniswion to revolute until his tongue hangs downs on nis) But Mrs aur did not treat him as evil: Perhaps in the course | through the third degree woen he tries dinner, Mr. Dinigston asked = Mrs, chest like a pink plush necktie, jone of fae amily, She neither gave| oP tine islature will make Sun-|t? touch @ bank on his note. ‘The lordly Ja “Mr. Jarr is old fashione: yhow, a revolution ears to be about the only ing word or baleful 1 day ball playing @ felony and class treats nim as though he were a as his coffee served at the beginning it Will jostle the average Latin-American out of his you have your meat rare or Q'ty murder * robber) | Penbandier, He is required to put up ot the meal.” | fur uightie,’ as we say. Revoluting about once in #0] Sir. Diniston?” che asked, | St" Mi olute security, turn his business and ow Mr. Dinkgton, who had r joften helps him to for: s¢ fever and his other wrongs. We celebrate really dogsn't matter, my dear he bum features of Sunday dase’ irance and household furniture n old acquaintance with tho Jarrs and | with flrewor! had invited hit © 4s this par ticular occasion Was concerned, to dine, had been wondering just how he coud t use the present renewed relations no | does ko—by “But the ad istration and he| Mrs. Ja replied the guest, “I am ra change tn a national admi are apparent to the blindest obser’ to the bans and mortgage the fu- {ifference in our respective temperaments, | not @ hearty eate: In the first place it takes buys and of his family vefore he can get b's ) who juinps in and begins shooting Is, if he| He wasn’t, either, Ile was @ hearty On a cent Neue Neh tGR the protection of an uar| Gntiker: Alons comes a large, breezy gentle: jutting 4, Why should he kick When the Mex-| ‘Isn't it terrible that I have to do n with @ line of salve and a few he was co dering whethe cans catch the spirit of the thing and nom nate mi for permanent goat? Per-|«" the carving eked Mrs. Jarre. “M jane and an invitaden As it is proposed that the salaries of ithe commission shall be te » I invite himself ta dine ever] sonatty, 1 always liked the order-loving Gerna who made the mistake|Jarr simply will not carve, I'm afrati oe a ’ kei Bate fod he i i BS H le : jon by keepin e 8 f being captured by Mosoy's me: de the Southe ies with civilian clothes|! did not break him in right at the perrows Hel oney in the bank on onse of $5 imposed on barber shops, the Harlem resolu- *4 n by ng cay i le in the 4 3 Uce tions denounce it as “ it is not quite that, but arr, #3 an Uundessiood release, 8 moved b: ly natural impulse to inquire what might be goin; If this was intended to bring ba: eee ak ‘ll be j et ie aie a. PE . a eee * Oe AE cmon ar are ies paper. After making the loan the estas ila The Likenes “We're going to you the same as any other spy," sald oid man Mosby, |{n Brooklyn—days ere the conquering banker writes letters to other bankers = d AG LAKONeSA, We're golig to hang you to this here tree. |Jarr had borne her away from the SIAHA Uhat ® certain Tipe ang Tome we: Se oeeammmanaamanmamanamaannanan Vell, said the German, otever is rule. | Dinkston w'> delaye'—It had its effect. heniey ou Es has dust mee @ touch a “T know What Would happen to any pauatella-bullt gent from Old Mexico that| “Ah, if I had gor > fair woman to| young away from the street corners | $00 AU VININE liv: Ot Ne skaned whem Letters From the People! SERINE Sa Te laEs ADEE GLIGeeciIRTC oe ver on ‘ur Mat ofcane| arses’ my soardt™ mo. ned” Mie""Diause | Sed" fack acon ot sntsons on Sundays [Be comes around. The whole secret ta line-that is, 1 know What would happen to him if we could cateh him, He'd go| ton, as he helped himself to the germ- | What would our et corners look like nee me ney bbeegeees picid 8 maicing bcs “ back home us perishable frelaht, pr ng he went at all, kilier and the weter—but not too inuch sunday afternoons Athout young men | SERA Pele ©; ne you the In the W 1 {all ages was a member Bus, speaking of wars, wasn't Mt 4 spleudid blow which the middle wing of | ' “Sh, vor, 1 but @ fair| and boys standing around smoking ch To the Editor of The Evening World of Bow igious bod W the ratio \the sou! nm Confederacy dealt the Northern mudsills here in New York? I was woman to gr my board garetes and indulging in chaste and re- Where could I find # list that will] was 1 a KO was dio under the jinpression that those boys lust their holt, in @ way of speaking, about) Mr. Jarr Was about to suggest tha: | fined conversation? What would our The New Alliance, tell me what three nations have every time Uncle Liss Grant met Marse overt E, Lee under a certain and well-|this would be @bout all that would saloon keepers do without their thriving } ‘ : , , ) to: ; " | «rac ard ¢* Dinkston, But tut, sunday afternoon trade? reest battleships a! apple Wee down at Appomattox, Va, But it seems they're sull slipping | «race the boa t tut, | Sunday | : wre Aa BD 4 f ‘tut! Dinkston was a guest. “another bad thing abou: Sunday |66 re Hanes firey iiibee ed ics Tot sfess 1 do not a 9sp your meaning,” sald Hiram, wrinkling nis} “I often wonder why you “@ da- | baseball is that it vequires violen io Thn tations i, ye ieage dnl chdhhe ‘ mezzanine ead In thou ried,” simpered Mrs. Jar ise in the open air and impels particl |v. ang Pel ay sormaed an offens- wf The iesing World “Then you haven't been fo ye Grand Jury disclosures," said Loerum.| sie wanted that man Jarr to hear panta therein to make Joud nolses and | jira tiers were ne Gen » arbinat Bags papers makes @ remarkable mixstate-! 1 Didn't you read avout the iny those Nashville bankers who came up to|that he might heed. Perhaps he did fil their lungs with ozone and inguigs Pittiars Gar gacasa ment, He says the church eadily | « take charge of the Carn Trust Company and immediately proceeded to put|not reallze the treasure he had won, in profuse perspiration, Sunday ts a day | Josing in membership. Tae United on @ line of frenzied fiance, with a rich Southern accent, that made Wall street | but here was a living exhibit iow | of rest, not exercise, Sunday oasevall States census returns show the f ® 1d? Didn't you hear how young Mr, Cummins, the lad with the South of| lives were wrecked by her coquetrts:, gives boys and young men coarse, 1Bg Opposite state of affairs to be true Ireland name and a south of the Ohio manner, climbed over the Yankee breast-jor rather by he= taking Jarr—thouga | jusay voves and has a tendency to In tweuty years the churches bh. fort works, holding la one hand the Bonnie Blue Mag That Bears but a Single Star,|he did not seem to realize 1! the hap- make thein strong and rugsed. And a creased 63 per min or words to that effect, and in the other a letter of introduction from Clarke|piest of men, and, at the same time, @ strong rugged youth is Huble to hurt 4 cent. in chure a f Williams to Charles Hiram Hyde? Yes, sir; those Tennessee patriots had to} mi somebody if he gets his temp: yused., communicants \ 1 into wait forty-five years for thelr revenge, but they it Mnally “Aah, it's @ sad story," sald Dinkston, "Craps, the favorite prevailing Sundvy outstrips the pe f t tusiria “But I'd hate to be the next hand organ man that stations himself under A.| “Emma, keep quiet at tho tabi afternoon & of the young inen and population, w Ws aD ‘ " ee a Carnegle’s window and begins playing ‘Dixte Andrew'll come out and beat him}, + Mfrs. Jar nace t’ ttle girl; | boys, is much more destrable than vase of 47 per cent which Ste oi #Your werk In the fourth act of |to death with a Ten Millon Dollar Peace Fund, But only eight of 1 be ta| rand you, too, Willie! Mr. Dinkston 1y| pall, It ts a game that can be played |” th. percen at “ rea | feve ‘ n we owngy Hamlet reminds me of Booth’ | cash. a speaking anywhere with @ palr of dice, rev) “Tho Irish," explained the laundry. communicas rh fact, and a Wa € vuthering “But, as Hamlet, I’m not on the! “What became of the other two?" asked Hiram ingocently. But what Mr. Dintaton was speaking | quires no violent exertion and ths play- man, “will offend and defend with the Pessimists, before you air your gloomy | old sheep?” 1 theories: iu WW one & every three out) ie Nothing.” swer ae (aa I work it \ at during the fourth agt.” “Oh, that’s the two that Cummins charmed out of Andy for @ deposit,” sal@ sbout y. i] have‘ wadt until tho next | ers converse with cach other In low, Gormans, but they won't associate ither a Booth.” Loerum solemnly, ’ time to hear, Ps Cad tones, Oftentimes, too, @ boy |/em." with | a + : ish ih We

Other pages from this issue: