The evening world. Newspaper, March 20, 1911, Page 12

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nein SESS AR OID 5 The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, March 20. 1911. | iA — The Day of Rest. Shakespea re’s WaT You NEED 15 A PLEASE SLIP This ON =< o Your One Month $3.50/ One Yoor .... :30, One Month fa § STEAW, Pre OSE Pit PULITZER Jontor, Bec'y. By Mauri ce Ketten. 1 Ertered ot the Post-Office at New York as Second-Cinse Motter. (t) V e @ ri es TWO-LEGGED MANIKIN. (NEED Two LEGS To DRAKE wat f ees a a THis HAREM SIRT By Atsert PaysonlIERHUNE. Gubsertption Rates to The Evening) For England and the Continent and ‘orld for the United States All Countries in the International qreat! | : conve | VOLONT Tua and Canada. Postal Union. { USE JOHN { VOLUME 41 1011, by The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York World), No, 6— BEATRICE and BENEDICK in ‘Much Ado About Nothing’ EDRO, Prince of Aragon, returning in triumph from war, stopped to visit Leonato, Governor of Messina, Pedro had two young officers In his retinue, Claudio and Benedick, one of whom wanted to come to Messina, while the other did not. Claudio loved Hero, Leonato's daughter, and was eager | to see her again. Benedick hated Beatrice, Leo- nato's niece, and had no wish for any future encounters with her sharp wit. For, lke many “funny men,” Benedick did not care for clever women, Before Pedro had started for the war Bea- trice had raised a laugh by announcing that she would eat as many of the enemy as Benedick might slay. This unjust slur on his courage THIS WEEK AND NEXT. LANS have been devised to pay in full all the claims of depositors in the Carnegie ‘Trust Company, and | it believed they will he perfected this week. Also, it is expected that eome definite terms will be obtained from the Interborough by the Public , Service Commission during the week. Further- | more, there are rensone for expecting the Senatorial deadlock to be broken at Albany before the week closes. To these matters of serious local importance and deep concern to many there may be added other expectations of less moment, but | etl ef general interest, including the return home of the Brooklyn | baseball team and the coming of @ record wrecking circus. Te ITOFF kled in the officer's mind almost as much as It fs, in fact, a week that promises much in the way of improve tr} NO DONT TS i sae iT @id a remark of hera that he was the Prince's BrATR Ce Say ment, reform and general joy; a fit close for the winter; a worthy 7 AND at Sa court fool or Jester. : pds oBk a pe oe, art! : jo, on the return to Mes audio and Hero ha hasbinger of spring. - h (T'S FULL acarcely begun their demure lovemaking when Beatrice and That some of its bright prospects will end in dissolving views ia fmevttable, but it will not wind up in All Fools’ Day—that will come next week. A Prince’s Benedick were busily renewing old-time quarrels, Pedro watched with amusementt this war of wits. Half in Jest he Conspiracy. § said to Leonato: “She were an excellent wife for Benedte 1 If they were but @ week marrie ——_—_—-++ | “they would talk themselves mad Treo! 9 But Pedro would not give up the {dea of making these sworn enemies fall DIVES AND HIS DOCTORS. You A ( d in love with each other. And, having a keen knowledge of human nature, the SUBWAY ' Prince hit upon a clever plan to turn thelr hatred Into affect! OME days ago at « notable conference of high med- STANDEE ! He and Leonato and Claudio strolied, as if by chance, one day an arbor * Where Benedick sat. They talked loudly to each other abou ces mad ical authorities # was announced that in this city secret adoration of Benedick, The latter listened amas Leonato gravely told the best medical service is at the disposal only of the others that Beatrice was In the habit of sitting up all night writing (and then shyly destroying) ardent love letters to Benedick, And Claudio added that ve ying ples Bacay Dia Fy poor, He ea being Hero had told him of Beatrice'’s constantly weeping and praying for her absent ry OTs 0 Inence are #0 busy in the service lover. The three sadly prophesied that Beatrice would surely Mle of a br because she was too proud to confess her love for a man w scorned her. Benedick Itstened {n open-mouthed wonder to these amazing lies, He mar- velled he had not sooner suspected that Beatri eared for him. Pedro had 7,5 A GREAT Success TCAME BACK To ASte YoU [ Aas | known how easily it is fora man to feot a new wing interest in any AM Going ToUSE Bite To DRAPE MINE ON JOHN [ Stes) Too woman when he ns that she {8 pining for tove 1 how strongly Bitte qon'T Do : supposed love can play pon masculine van wged Bene- ck's nature wrong th came out ef « hiding place, when the others ad moved on, and of great hospitals and schools of medical ecience that ay can be lured to private practice only by fees of millionsire ime, This doctrine, so gracious to the poor and so gratifying to plu- ‘tocracy, was well accepted when uttered, and was nowhere disputed. Now, however, there comes from London a despatch that threatens to rrr \ Sure! SHORT Alesipate it. Sir Almroth Wright, M. D. F. R. S,, ie reported as ; “LEGGED Th 8 ken heart, © thought saying in a recent address “he had been in consultation with twenty- “Loves me? Why, tt must be requited., T will be hi Jove with her!’ ' 4 i. When he met Beatrice a few utes later, ssailed him as usual | one doctors around @ rich man’s bed and none of them knew anything with the barbed shafts of her s he fondly be that every sharp word | about him.” for great unspoken love. Pedro had been right in counting diind Intelligence. Next the conspirators repeated the same trick with Beatrice. Hero, with one of her gentlewomen, fell into earnest talk one day Within earshot of Beatrice, and lamented Renedick's unrequited love for the ha Hero sald that Benedick was silently suffering anguish because he adi teatrice and becaus | she was so cold toward him. The two passed on, leaving Heatrice dumfoundel. Bue Upon that showing the average citizen who can afford but one! doctor has as good a chance as he that has the whole faculty of a medical college at his service, and perhaps better. Dives may well afford to share his doctors with Lazarus. ————_-++-—____. | | | BEFORE SOCIALISM. : | eapaadaannnsnn he Teale! atl had captured | Bewedl oie cwaky qilte an peter | A Strange in luring her. She sked upon him merely as a brill- | fant opponent in the battlefield of wit. Now she be- Courtship. Neved he was dying of love for her she w him tn DISCUSSION in which six speakers took part at the banquet of Intercollegiate Socialists disclosed a conviction that the lives of boys and girls in New York are subject to many evils and exposed to many dangers. These, it was said, range all the way from impure milk in babyhood and insufficient a new and roseate@ll; ecstacy: ‘Benedick! Love on! I will requite thee, tamine my proud he | Joving hand. If thou dost love, my kindness shall Incite thee.” Aagfe | The next time the two met each was looking eagerly for signs of love tn the jother, Failing to observe such signs they disc \tlons, the double trick that had been played upon th | But the mischief was already done, Thr She murmured to herself in t to thy by means of a Ye scheme ¢ ; tea fan lac alaiana it AA nnnnneeeeeeeenenneee |tually fallen im love—or fancied t had, w ed to amount ‘ood and education in childhood, to sweatshops and bad politics in Th J | f N Y 5 jsame thing. Benediek surrendered, saying in mock despair ie “I will have thee. But I take thee fe $e ts. : e Journal of a New York Society Girl Uy SEEDS Send cs ty The very recognition, however, of ¢o many evils is in itself an “I would not deny you; but I yleld upe t persuast evidence that they are not so dangerous nor so pernicious as the: or whether we sat or rode stlent, in ay!f tt does not know when it ts under-) hands tn yours and lead me safe —- ORD eI Cri aren Denpaleby Bibs Hers 2 Will Bton ae ct AWh en ‘a. danmae ts foreseen 1b can be He inst. Wh y By Alice Eldridge. silence which quivered with unspokea|stocd? Ah, but T had other proot|Rest my tired head upon your breast (Nect—KATHERINE and PETRUCHIO nes fe . guarded against, en TNOPSIS OF RECEDING CHAPTER. , | mysteries, than that—on that last bitter efter-|and tell me all {s well. Take my —_——_—_++e—____ an evil is understood, precautions are easy. Law, science and charity | wins Feit Ssh eid cae tat eons | nee © omeey. Danek #8 tt anrmat tat} | nono— | bleeding heart and comfort as you| when it 1s loved? Ask a starving soul Oh, my hero, take my trembling/ alone can comfort. And you cannot—/ cg Dear as remembered kisses after death And sweet as those by hopeless fanoy Oy feign'a On Iips that are for othe Deep as first love, an regret: Hat abe tates the artific are, in fact, already at work to apply remedies as effectively as human ima fae eccumatn nes have ford up . 5 Her mot) t imperfection can provide them. ctiooers for rate to eld and deep as love, wild with all There is no other city in the world whese public and private funds are s0 liberally granted for the advancement of the welfare of Royal Children and How Unavoi ‘able. the old world,’ @ Iand bathed tn the that never was on land or eea,” and how looking up I beheld an angel with MASTERPIECES OF PAINTING. |e flaming sword guarding the threshold 4 ' and looking closer I saw that the sword ee N the score of “upholding the purity of art” it is|of the angel who blocked my entrance | INCE thirteen months or more wie we've 601 \« P } the weak as in New York. Here, at least, we do not need any aid Chapter V. | They Are Brought Up ™ Death tn Tate the Gave: set on beaten on “talk thee of Socialism. In fact, due remedies will probably be provided for TUH vreaking heart I write nee eee remeron Whet? Tea 10 served, T must go. | shat the matter and they can Cult ute the 3 ° (A ae yes,’ said an Engliah ba » me the all our social ills before Socialism has a chance to do anything more oe eittes Asie! tre om he By Henry W. Fischer why atrhegie, tam weary. sai Panga a NTC cat ne llaucegesOliolt Mog Equal for H m’ than talk about them. to the gates of Paradise, aw Mena mare Se pee ee (To be continued.) ‘ae hear en a ht CERTAIN Aimerican naval officer brought a > mankind,” eo scrNa, n to the frie. Washing | ceneinie fires are a disgrace pe | +) | and limttations of constit=sional king- 5 ual oF ae ae 3—The Royal Chile! jii3."'in order that, if called to the In the Tall ae r throne at a ly » he shall h ar dren of Belgium. iperitiaunslentin eects Catan ie Unfair Advantace. he Belians bate 8 KAGE tele ct, ete ce canes | TETRO. hed drifted down to ‘ . ; said that two paintings reputed incor was made of gleaming dollars, m4 A rage " je from publte Institutions, by a religious P was working with @ gang at ng," ificer, goed wee paintings reputed inc rectly to be) "hor six days the glamour of youth's ff whom they can honor ed re! instructor and by one of athletics, the Laren ery toca 1 ieee works by George Inness, and recently withdrawn | dreams enfolded me, The young man | speot, a Queen to whom they | iatter an expert in archery and’ ball ratte nut an f Melican man comes up from the Schemm sale, are to be destroyed. | Who came to see mother on business the look up as an inspirimg €X-| niaving, the Belgian national game, Be ‘One bot day he was eating his noon tuncheon + ym ‘ae poet | day of the cotilion Is a forester. He, | ample of true womanhood, wile three sale This raises a question as to what constitutes | mother and 1 went out the day after lively children make the gilded halls of AISI : a s the Brussels palace resound with their masterpiece of painting in . the country estate where the famous t P TT Pp g in the minds of dealers and | toreats of oaks ere, for some disease i# foyous laughter, when, an is more often | collectors. It does not appear that the pictures in question are defi- | attacking them | the cane, they are not busy butlding | cient in form, tone, drawing or color. In fact, they are so excellent | His name ts Bashford Arnos And ae “mawmen!” ih Tashan Park or driving mother, thinking of him, T suppose, jer ponies along ita miles of grass | as to have been long deemed equal to the best work of the reputed | an upper servant, did not deem it neces-| roads that are very gractous to intan- | i PP i author. They are denounced solely because some one put a forged | **tY to chaperone us we were Dractically | tile fale from the saddle, name on them. alone, Upper servant! Because we) The new King, Albert, wil! be thirty. pay him! What snobbery! His ancestors etx years old in April next; his wife, If it chould be proven that Shakespeare did not write Hamlet, | are gentlemen in the time of Wah Janbdeth, ts one year his juntor. . se fi neton ve look back to f 5 literary critics would still uphold it as a masterpiece. If it should | Peel tet Ties you, | Bt SS ee Nemes ne BatPy be proven that Beethoven did not write the Kreuizer Sonata, musical | ord Shag iene ise of gold Baines, (60 rene i Chacon TisaG are the street cars or else a cab, at the critics would none the less maintain its merits. Should some new-| nix daya I lived as one Ives Who| cena) Just turning five. Both perenta | Tate of 76 cents an hour; and when his found record disclose that Angelo did not design the dome of St,|!* Young, who te Just trying the won-| ary good Tooking, with the grace of |Tv! highness goes travelling it's a Bs, ; : derful responses that be str third-class railway carriage for him a bead Peter’s, architects would nevertheless admire its majesty. Why! ¢rom the chord of life, who first hear and his tutor, In Europe the third class worlen should it be different in the world of painting? Has a picture no | the song that is joy, How can I de 1s the ‘day coach,” mainly patronized . ‘ 5 the tremulous by workmen and market people; there- merit beyond that of a curio that must he authenticated ? ? ‘ emotion, m @ phue log when he saw @ tig rattlor curled a sure that Carl Theodore and the boys of the high court functionaries never miss Brabant's ..thletic lessons, To make Capt. Maton's instructions as to constitutional kingship the better understood, Leopold and ts governor Gt deincralically vulside the Except on state occasions, of when riding with either of hts parents, the Crown Prince never uses a royal coach or auto. For driving in the coun- try he has an old “chaise,” or a e@ort of buckboard trap, drawn by a stout “peasant” horse, In the city he uses IE corset cover made all in thinking people, thelr features dencting seriousness and kindness, a dtstinction thetr boys inherited tp @ remarkable de- gree for children so amall, The little eS > h belt days of almost ungues W jee 1. | fore tt affords excellent opportunity for with w » his eyes sought mine in compre: | At is © Gerling, ink and witte anal studying the pepple and of tearning 7 ais blond, with chubby cheeks and an atr : | cover hension, when hands would touch | pris ae aie ..| thelr needs, ambitions and claims, : Letters From the P 1 “fo ineep at Mt | | fauneinae tmpart se caagtone: ||,<Afler each, ouline: ing Albert sae, pee | To sleep at night knowing that we | 7 Mh: ood, thons his boy as to things and condt- under-arm sed to el D m1 cor very by ewed up. It is eop e | woud’ be together In the morning: to| Belgium {# but a small country, very | tion new to him, and it 19 sald echoes MISS HETTY SCRUDGE | Be gewen MB oh «| proud of tts sovereign, On that account |" ‘ if ige, whether of the youngster’s reports are some- SAY | Tower edge, wh cing Albert ot allowed to fo it ia. finished 1 King Albert ts not allowed to follow Mis) tiem heard in the Council of Ministers, Fie eee wit the lower ex be finishes e days, the dl aeepndl b.. In the World Almanac, him ally pre. who my | inclination to send nild c a i: ja belt or peplum. Where can I find a list of the namea ed the drug-| panionship. Oh, wonderful days, and|% wel bapa va) | Of Flandera he 19 not allowed to talk | Parone he scene H. G. P. of pre- |eves than mere friendship; I understood 01 q *, fects, the servani attend- regulates the of pra: |even than mere friendahin: understood | er gay when the pramnt King aa (ee wuniecls and the servant attend-/{] FELLER WHAT REAGHED ||] if, ‘SP *Wie* neck k for Girla, tesue copy of | ke woman's heart has been | sumed the crown he nominated his eld- nl a and speaking no other tongue. | AGREEN OLD AGE WHAT Mor othe 16 year pon the ree | fr nd stark all her life. est son Duke of Brabant, and a month '. eit th neede. . for a remirrection from the| tater created Carl Theodore Royal} Their summer vacations both Frinoee | WUZ NT ASOUR OLD cuss. | size “yard a eded girls and p- HARD M. MAGEN dead, it Was ke the thrill of spring | Gount of Flanders, spend roaming about the country learn. | 2 5 along the frozen eart at frees the atta te edly oun posite? New York Slang, tong fi arth, that frees the |” migttyearcold Flanders te ati tn thts | (0&4! that ts to be learned by y °F w murmuring » and draws the birds é 4 ters about farm life, ita hardships and | Draggiste’ Rules. w World peste aii gacerive ¢ when | mother’s charge, receiving instruction | tore Sout TAA tm cten of their | To the BAitor of Bvening Word a aye Asal gts es ery thought of remembrance ts Mke| from the prinotpal of one of the public io Lihat eRe TH Aa @ practising numbe knife turning in a wound, while I] achools and following closely the lat- “ ah thas aeniced rete ‘4 inches Sache Mbeny brand iil inyself of dreaining of Nothing else, | tera curriculum, but the Crown Prince | ,DUning one of these excursions last ; ‘One-Plece Corset Cover—Pattern No, 6978, Pail : : He was «eo tender, drave and| has a governor, Mr. Maton, captain of | £al! Mttle Fianders jotted down the| ern No. 6078 is cut in sizes fer misses of 14, 16 and 18 years of { preser , 1 has a ptat i we q te npaeiblt strong—@ mane nd 1, the] artery, for Brabant ts already an om. | Prices of ce ge ree and | 6 prohibits y and I found| Woman that he toved Tete as a th Ra weal yg | country: sai #, asking his mamma na containing certain strong | extract: "Whenever a | turn of his head, 1 read it in his ey Wel perenn asia t0 De devel to compare and find out whether the | alkaloids or poisons without SPECLA reclaims to vou, ‘in worldly even upon his sealed Ips. T thrilled | to-morrem Jf he had the misfortune o} were not overcharging her consent of the physician, For the pri I'm @ chtid,’ you cousider that | and gloried, forgetting all else, losing hie father they were, and more advan- Lialains ce ithe cabane thi son is only & off from| I felt it pulsating out tome, whether) gonooling of Crown Prince. r z eed bo coger iia kl pa d accou that vou| he was by my side or not, whether wel” hd on Prince, tote | aetous, arrangements were made with ‘ | doster nes W he PreseriD- ave GUT TIAT PERSON'S NUM | ted. of wonky “his interosta, ia o King jive Mr, Maton complet | tne boy's frien | f tom “nonrepetita”’ (‘do not repeat") ®8 BIDK, and i @ Number One ife, as we did and I felt prouder than] charge of the boy, and his prime duty | ‘t & perhaps unnecessary end harmed el , CLD TmmR. | Uny' crowned queen to be bla conndente, te te improve upon Lacpotd ‘the @uttes (heet: The Kalewta Grandchitéren), - Rasa masala tn eaeaaan dane aamemmmmaanienaeaeiainaiaiaiaeeeeiateentena tana ames

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