The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1911, Page 18

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—- ] nd The "Evenin 3 aa ‘obnsned Dafly Except Sunday by th i Park Ro’ ew if J. ANGUS BTLAW, Prea and Treany SOSt Pit PULITaR Park how 68 Park rear Pubtishing Company, Mes, 68 te 48 | Junior, Beo'y. | OW. et New York a For FE LI pd-Clt “ond f England and t All Countejes in the Internationel ‘oste) Unio $3.50 One Your 30) One Mont DRUG FRAUDS. de by The World of dis- { drugs there have al- 'T of the exposure n honest practises ready developed two «ide issues. One of these raises n question whether the impurities noted in some of the drugs sold are to be blamed on the dealer or on the manufacturer. The other calle ior inquiry as to how far the brdly compounded prescriptions are due to dishonesty on the part of a dealer or to the employment of in competent clerks for the sake of economy. As each of these issues has an important bearing upon the main question, it is gratifying to find that many persons engaged in the drug business have promptly volunteered to aesist in the task of in- quiry and investigntion. With much allies there is good prospect of providing the law officers with eufficient information to justify indict- ments wherever guilt is found. In the meantime there is mre to be a new vigilance on the part of afl drugziste. Neither impure drugs nor incompetent clerks will be permitted anywhere for e while at least. ———- -—+4- NEW YORK FINANCIERS. ROM Peking comes «@ report that a loan of 50,000,000 to China by American financiers has been agreed upon, and that an imperial edict an- nouncing ft is expected before the week closes. This marke the success of one of the most in- [~—] teresting developments of dollar diplomacy in the interests of New York financiers. Tt has not been made clear why our bankere are ao enger to lend this money to Obina—why they are willing to go to war about it provided others will do the fighting. There fe no surplus of money in sight for home enterpries. Some of our biggest and best railroads have had to apply to London and Paris and Berlin to get |.ans dented them in Wall street. Yet Wall etreet has 850,000,000 to literally force upon a people that would prefer not to borrow it. New York, {it appears, {s ae oosmopolitan {n her finance ae in her population and her commerce, To-day her bankers dictate treaties to China; to-morrow they may order an army into Mexico. ie heeeeins NATIONAL HONOR. HILFE a strong majority of the people of both the United States and Great Britain approve the proposal for a comprehensive treaty of arbitration between the two nations, and while the Secretaries of State and the Ambassadors of the two admin- istrations are eager to carry out the plan, they yet and with hesitation as if they were about to venture upon an experiment more dangerous than war itself. The cause of the halting and the trembling {a a fear on ench side that something will be done to affect “national honor.” What is national honor? World. | *. ae ‘ € ori RINGS WHILE You wace ? Kato d Dail | weer The By Mauri CAN You EAT Tv CAN You STano ‘Tw Pressure 7 Magesine. Wedne Test. ce Ketten. Yes, Sin IP 1 CAN SmMore eaTi CAN You CRAWL INTO Tis SEVEN ROOM AND BE COMFORTABLE? FLAT Sik, CAN STAN eA 2 SAA Yo Py 4 yr Mere sday. v oO IT b By Alice Eldridge. Once upon a time there was a belief in a personal honor that| $NOPSI8 OF PRECEDING ©! made men shoot one another “for the principle of the thing.” Even | faght st yruty, om #0 great a man as Alexander Hamilton gave up his life for it. We | Hi tipthet ca do not believe in it any more, and we get along much better. There can be no national honor that is antagonistic to a just peace, and justice is more likely to be assured byvarhitration than by war. ——+4 + —_____ COMMUNITY OF IDEALS. OCTOR ELIOT has told the young men at Harvard that the force which holds the family, the nation and the eocial organism together is neither liberty nor equality, but @ community of ideals. Our democracy aiming at equality has produced greater inequalities of condition than are to be found else where on the globe. Only in despotisms can there be an effective levelling process. Where men are free, differences of opportunity and differences of ability will always lead to unequal conditions of power and privilege. Such being the law of life for every political organism, ft be comes a matter of prime importance to enltivate within it a clear comprehension of the ideals 1t embodies, and to inculcate a loyal devo tion to it. It ts a lack of euch community of ideals that has reduced the Democratic party to an almost unorganized mase of voters. It is | a similar lack that prevents the people of New York from exerting their enormous power for good government. Thus Tammany {s en- abled to thwart the party will in the one case and a doren cliques of greed and graft to halt progress in the other. Tax Bachelors for Sick Babies’ Fund. By» Nixola Greeley-Smith ance for the confirmed elpates of New York to my @ we ahe meets Mother on buat tracted at fret the. far soem fer Dhan of marr old-Dound, | ight trom the wh ‘mee nice throws (hem th nit gle revoltes to follow eo duke CHAPTER VI. CANNOT asleep. The moon shines oold and clear into my room, in one broad path across the Oriental richness ' of the rug. If T could but take that road and travel out into the starry @paces, through the blue vault of heaven, to find shelter on the old breast of the moon, But I am brt @ poor mortal creature, My bet ies te the laces tear as 1 tue! rewtiens! y My pillow is hot, there la no rest. no peace since I inet looked into his ayes, read there his secret and comprehended the strength thet kept that secret un- spoken, T cannot sleep, I wilt take thie Journal and write of that las afternoon. Form. | inw the written Words may ease the patn | around my heart « trifle a bedro I have throw? ue aati: up falla across tie oryatal and gold of ny dew pet {tt a pitiful contrast, the beauty around me, the breaking heart wit.tn, It wes our last afterncon—oh, wome: yut there in the wide world, have you | too known what that word “last” means | \n bitter teare and bleeding drops fron ortmeon hearts! It ls @ word to dute! and freeme the very blood within our Secs TES eer ee = Quick Promotion. ee det, heir own @ocond, end incidentally acquire all the © penalties of matrimony unmesried men of Oconto, ar tax of % as the price 9 @ wel{-Kuverning body. If they pay a bache re ft I ppose every New ‘ wry tax, what 1 ey thar o the BVENING bies can't way T don't stand their point rs, ‘hat thousands of other men 1 women have met the » kation that you s! ar @ remit ew York C: wit @ 4 slaughter of the Innocents of which even oki King Herod would be as Thousands of perf £001 dabies die during the hot montha tn the tene- ment districts because o: Ang and lack of care. The Hventng World w h ite * shies for years fought this eum- mer curse of inta Bachelors, don't you want to pay @ v y elor tax to The Evening World's Sick Baby Mund? “How Is your brother the militia “Oh, splendidly! the grade \and made him @ Second Sergeant.” t r i ng on In| They let him akip f First Sergeant entirely | veins. We had not oome back to ¢he house until very late, dreading after- noon tea with mother beside us. frozen road; on every aide the great the winter sun tay dying. yet 80 gentle, and oh, with such love in sorrowfully, as be might to one dead 1 understood, !t wae the ghost of hie dead |love to whom he spoke. | toi {f not, at and that the remembran: together will grow sweet to you—not Our horses’ steps echoed along the| pare trees rose, as through their arches We were lent, until Just hefore we neared the urn of the road he drew rein, I glanced into his pale face, ao mauly, #0 strong, tas he gased at me He spoke quietly, He had re- ounced me. In my despair I seemed to the great, glittering old of my mill- raising, raising to drag me down ike quickwanda, “I hope you will be happy, very happy; that you tter ‘T have known suffering all my Mfe-| want happiness--cannot—cannot’— | My hands fumble¢ with the reine, | winter woods; but, oh, ft ts orying bit- | terty as @ child left out in the snow— The Journal of a New York Society Girl One great, hot, scalding tear fell His face was very pale. “Oh, girl,” he cried, “if clreumstances had been different—if you and I could but change places”— Then, fearing for the strength of his resolution he raised his bands and quickly drew me toward him. “Goodby, beloved,” he whispered and Riased me on the lips. He was» gone; his horse galloped through the winter woods, Gone, and I have not seen him «ince; gone, and | wit not see im again. He called me beloved; and I have the remembrance of his Kise to comfort me through the years, the great, barren, bitter years. My here le strong, my chosen mate ts man. My heart ie proud thet he had the strength to ride away through the No happiness, no comfort, no joy for me—oh, come back, come back to me, my hero and my king; mo one kiss, no matter how passionate or wilt with | \Reflections ofa ww & Bach When a man fatls to fall in love ing his bad tuste; but when a tooman fails to fall in love with a man he nin't pelp respecting her good judgment, A woman may not de able to love more than one at a Mme; but any | man is more broad-minded than that. Marriage should come under a Hat of “Modern Arta and Crafta,” con sidering how much art (t requires to catch a husband and how much oraft it takes to keep one, nowadays. When a man reaches the aga twhere #he dbegina to believe al the heauty advertisements tell her, tt won't be long before she will be beloving everything @ man tella her. No doubt when Adcom fell he sata dt waa Decauaa he tripped over Bve's icwlous akirt | A new firtatt th "wen takes away the bitter taste of No man is greater than his bank By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1011, by Tae Prem Publishing Co (The Mew York World). RT me cook iia writes hie love-letters. Whon a man begina to Rave that tired feeting in @ flirtation, (t never seems to ocour to him thet @ giri may be getting a Kittle touch of heort-fag, too, Marriage t@ merely a matter of choosing whether you would rather put up wtth @ young man's follies or with an old man's grouch, elor Girl @ man's meals, and I care not who with @ woman she can't help resent. ] Jove, ean comfort for all time—come back, come back and take me for your own. I was med the other night. Bashford was right; he recognized with a mar> clear comprehenaion the strength of the family and social structure which Presses upon me Between us there ts & gulf deeper than the Atlantic Ocean, and I alone cannot cross it. What ‘8 there left for me? To fold my hands, emle and aesent, merely a matter of form, to my marriage with the Duke of Rutiertord Me te the highest bidder; hie @ueal corenet, his family older than the Conquest, has been « high enough price for all my beauty and aM my what 1s before me. I feel a strange kin- ship with the slaves in the old Roman markets; surely, surely, they must have looked up Mt God's free way, felt the soft breese blowing where it listed, and longed to be one with the alements? Are the ohaine any less real because chey are not seen upon my wrists, or the walle which surround me any lels prison walls beosuse they seem to the idle passes the white marble palace of iny father’s, the great Iron king’s home? (To Be Continued.) The Day's ‘ Good Stories Her Markswomanship. ‘HE militia bave were e wo o (@e morrow, ond os we wo Goon Gemith parted with hie ewesthbeart on the ‘a ys teen s Me ot el “Becaces,” he laughed, “ten @2 ome you'd alt the captain.“—Jadge. _ Wanted His Vote. HAVE caliet,” of the candidete to the men with the flzeengine face, “to find if 1 may count Upon your vote at Are you tm favor of thts ‘we whe ‘ad “1 am, at,” proudly prociaimed the candidate. “In tect, | T may cay that | wae cme of the prime agitators for thie ny ‘vd The man with - wo mM dleoves and closed Ie flvte, “Then gut orf my doorstep,” he cried, “Chet ert while you're afl dn ome pie, I'm the lamp Lighter! Th dibte, \ Comune Left Behind. Hp late Joh OA, Wand the, nat Wad ok te teas the tint le es game, end Wand, the firs, doh, had him taking Wow fen: "Nyon Bi oust the om, Peg ae ig My MO come he was shot aut ot the saddle, He som: ereaulted over (ie fence ani lected im the next Het) on his head, “Want, hurrying ap, exit, t eoethe Mank’s teoltygs Bplwadid fom, old 1} Dene fuss the war T do it any One aocount, Here Ward anja ‘Only, you know, | alware manage to take Angus Tames, the bone over with uie,! Lae . ‘ h 2 2. 1998 kespeare's ove Sfories ‘Coprright, 1011, by The Prew Publidiing Oo. (The New York Wortm, NO. 7.—KATHERINE AND PETRUCHIO.—In “The Tamingef the Shrew.”’ ] ATHERINE MINOLA, the daughter of } & Paduan merchant, had beauty and K fortune that made her famous throughout Padua; and a violent temper that made her notorious through all Italy, Her wealth and good looks could not counterbalance her shrewish tongue; and men fled from her as from @ plague, ‘ Baptis' her father, despaired of finding her a husband. The bravest wooer and the greediest fortune-hunter alike fied before her rages. She cuffed her gentle sister Bianca, stormed at her father, smashed « mandolin over her music teachers head, and waked the echoes with ber shrill ecoldings. AR last, Petruchio, a rich, eccentric Verona, heard to Padua A Strange. Courtehip. struck him in the face. dlow. Then he declared he loved her and that he found her wondrows mentie, He wound up by announcing that he was going to marry her the following Su@ day. In vain Katherine ratied 1 stormed. Her bitterest speeches were eut mhort by th jeeminely cragy lover, who pretended to find in her all that wae most charming, When he went away he promised to return on Gunday with rich bridal «gifts. edding guests assembled at the church the next Sunday. But no Orie Groom appeared. Katherine was bdevide hersetf with fury, thinking Petruchio had played @ foke on her, But, just as the guests were about to depart, Petruchio stamped tn. dressed in tatters He forestalied Katherine's angry rebuke by bursting inte @ pretended rage, swearing, shouting and ordering every one about. He raged #0, fleroely that even Katherine was frightened. As soon as the ceremony was over, he lifted his wife to the back of @ raw. boned olf horse and started with her for his country place. Throughout the Journey he awore and raged. When they reached the house Petruchio weloumed his bride to his home with effusive cortiality; but almost at once began to at the servants, Katherine was half starved. But her husband hurled the éia- ner to the floor, declaring !t was unm for so lovely @ woman to touch. She was fatigued; but he vowed her bed was not well made. So he tore it to pieces and forced her to sleep in @ chair. All night she was kept awake by the vetoes of Petruchio as he howled threats at his servants. Next morning breakfast was set before the famished shrew. Pofore she could touch {t Petruchio announced that !t wae {il cooked and threw it away He spoke only the most loving words to her. But to every one else he asezmed an air of ferocity that appalled her. A tatlor came to show her some beautiful costumes. Aa soon as she chose one, Petruchio would say it was unworthy of her and would kick It e side. Thite passed the brief honeymoon. At tts end Katherine weg #0 cowed and bewlidered that she ecarce dare’ call her soul her own. Then they forth on @ visit to her fath ‘On the journey Petruchio spoke of the brightness of the midday moon. She corrected him; pointing out that the sun, not the moon, was just then shining. she ; pent his bargat:), he sent Katherine to the Petruchio awaited her. “Te shal! be the moon or stars or what I list!" he roared. “I aay ft !s the moon.” “| know it !# the moon!” sighed Katherine obedient- ly. “You Ne! eee, The Shrew’s Reform. It is the blessed sunt” contradinted Petruchto. “What vou will have {t named,.even so It {s,”" assente Katherine. ‘They passed @ withered old man upon the road. Petruchio greeted him as @ young «irl, and asked Katherine if ever she hed seen a lovelier maiden. Katherine meekly agreed that the axed man was a young and beauteous damesl. Petruchio crossly declared tt was no girl, Out an olf man, and bade her apologise y reached Baptista’s house, Katherine had grown so geatie and sweetly audmissive that her own family ecarce recognized her. Before them all Petruchio tried test after test, that in former days would have spurred Katherine to diind fury. But now she responded with a meekn that seemed | ttle snort of miraculous, The climax came when, at Petruc orders, she read the other women of her acquaintance a lecture on the loving obedience due from good whrs to thelr husbands The former shrew was thoroughly tamed task, Petruchio cast aside his pretense of ty the most devoted of hu nda. Having nccompitehed this miehty anny and fll-temper and became (Next—ROSALIND and ORLANDO.) — oo ON AN AUTO RIDE. SOMEWHAT SWAMPY. Sentimental Daughter — Oh, father!| ‘Did you make anything on that sw from didn’t urban lot?’ “Haven't furure4 it out as yet. You I bought at by the front toot and by the gallon."—Chicago Journal. took! Imn't the dying day tm Practical Parent (awaken! nap—What? Where ia it? I MPIRT dresses 4 worn by ttle erie this seagon. ‘Thia ons includes al! the latest features. yore ‘out tn one b theanortaiceve makes the finish, but the border has been out off and ap- Pliet over the sleeve edges, In the back ov The wwe @re equatly to model, while & ale can be made from plain material t or fin! with a hem only, ‘The dress ‘bore aista of yoko and whirt, The skirt te wtreigm and goth eret at the rc 0 wive the Kmpire me, The a mote at i} whe . Por a gir! ot 1 of ten be needs of shea an 8 ches wid yards ol or Oe Girl's Empire Drese—Pattern No, 6973, Praha iaunelne 5-8 yard 18 for the yoke and slooves te make as shown tn tho back view. “A * Pattern Woe, G079 ts oni in wises Cor girls ef § 10 and 11 years of Age. ie or a with banat) How Cail at THY EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON PAbIIiON; 5 BUREAU, Leaington avenue aud Twenty-third sireet, or send by | mall te MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 1a B. Twenty-third street |} OPemtm IN, ¥, Bend cen cents in osim or stamps for each pattern ortared, These IMPORTANT—Wehe peur addruse — plaiuly 1 always Bueiis spectty sise wanted, Add two comts for letter postage if in a *thurry.

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