The evening world. Newspaper, March 24, 1911, Page 22

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-_— Ye Che merger STorld. *bushea Patty I 1g Company, Nos. 68 te 42 R Junior, Beo'y. 0 One Voor One Month VOLUME seeeee MOVING PICTURES. OMMISSIONER FOSDICK reports that jurisdic- Can You You ARE SPENDING Too MUCH ON YouR HATS -Iwish You'd LET ME Pick ONE For You NExT Time tion over moving picture shows is at present di- vided or scattered among no less than seven dif- | ferent departments of the municipal government. That is clearly too many. He recommends that all 3 supervising authority be vested in a single depart- | ment. That appears reasonable. The picture show is a now thing in the world, a nondescript, | being at once a theatre and not a theatre. Woe cannot make any of the old legal garments fit it in a way to pass muster. Therefore it must be measured and an ordinance made to suit it. | There are great possibilities in the matter for good as well as for evil. The picture show ia provided #o cheaply as to be within reach of all, and can be readily made as instructive as it is inter- esting. It should not be over-censored. It belongs to the people— | not to the Dryasdusts. ny HORSE AND AEROPLANE. | J HEN Belmont Park {s changed from a race track to an aerodrome the new epoch may be said to have established itself and taken up a house and home. There will be, of course, some regret for the old time sport, but it will not live long except in the breasts of those that have lost step with the march of progress. The Jaws that precipitated the closing of the race tracks were not passed without due consideration. They are the result of evils tolerated if-not patronized by men who controlled the tracks—evils of 60 gross a nature that popular common sense as well as the public Ponscience condemned them. But in any case the aeroplane would sooner or later have usurped ‘more or less of the space as well as of the’time and energy and money given to horse racing. It is the novelty of the day and, therefore, | fashionable. It is also the biggest possibility in sight for the future | gnd, therefore, exciting. Every city must make way for it and give it room, +o PAST AND I Ri:SENT. \GISTRATE, CORRIGAN says the town {s far more open than it wae under Devery, Mr. John Harsen Rhoades, a trustee of the Greenwich Savings Bank, says the conditions of the savings banks are not so good as they were in the eighties. The Citizens’ Union protests against playgrounds in the parks and saya since baseball has been permitted they are not as quiet as they used to be. * © Each’ of these statements seeks the condemnation of an existing condition ‘by setting it up against a bygone standard. But who re- members those standards? Who can recall with accuracy the things that used to be? Devery’s day may have been bad, the bankers of the eighties may have been wise, and the uptown parks may have been quite quiet of old, but the bygone years have left no yardstick by which to measure | much more reliable than imagination. There have certainly been | changes in many things since yesterday, but not in the good old|%* proverb: “Comparisons are odious.” ALWAYS REMEMBER. DDRESSING the Drew Theological Seminary Dr. Booker T. Washington eaid: “Always remem- | ber that from the ‘South you hear more of our enemies than of our friends. You hear of the white man who burns @ negro’s house or lynches | of Southern men and women who help the negro, lend him money to start and look after him.” This counse! is pertinent to more issues than that of the South and the negro. It has a value in the consideration of every problem in life. Destructive forces make a great noise in the world, while those that build are silent. The thunderstorm that strikes down one tree outroars all the hidden forces that make the forest grow. We must of necessity strive and strain in the ceaseless struggle Against evil, in the continual battle for reform; but there is no use| fretting about anything. By unnoted influences and through quiet Ways the world is getting better every year, and the truth is worth femembering all the Pi How Manyt worth about #9 to me Now ehoukt 1) To the Patton of Tue Day this overcharge of 8%? What ts The Cynical Man hastily Will you please | readers try | the Wisest thing for me to do, readers? Datted hie hair, | )eents whieh | have already paid the full value of “IT have two things in iffe to be exe She|the ning and do not know wheter to thankful for,” he murmured plously. to Bet goose eggs, duck exes and | pay the batance or not. This may in- “My hair and my front teeth!” | bens’ eggs. Goote exes were welling ac|tereat other readere who have pur-| "Since you were young and - 4 cents en 2 cent each) Chased jewelry tn the same way. | looking,” 1 proceeded calmly. “And end each, How RA ©. we ‘© agreed to Gisagree on most @id she tny ¢ to get twenty The Fence Problem, | subloct i €BBs~ 800 kin ‘To the Batitor of The Ryeaing World “Because you are Irish, They do not! * I. 8. KANSKI As to the problem of "A square tract agree with anybody on general prin- | Innak Walton, of land ed with boarde 11 feet long J otples. | Bo the Palitor of ane Weld and the fence four boards high, contatn- | "We disagree on most subjects," I * Who-and what was Izaak Watton? | thg many boards aa ac T do itas continued “And I tnaist that Destiny | ° R. follows: In one acre there are 4,%40 | has something to do with it. Destiny Izaak Walton was a B thor square feet, the perimeter of one square decreas whether the dewdrap form cn ‘and spor cot known by bis treats acre ie SBi.8418 feet + 1. This giv the petal of a fower or on the soot on| ley Illes! tee, “The Complete An | 16.89466 = 4 = 808.6780! boards necessary to @ tenement window stl, for in Dinmond Ring. | fence one acre STROA * B02. GTRAN “Destiny Is mind as Ju ine To sie F 1 ng World 92,160 boards and the answei a) Man. eu e wise vise me what A J FARM. | J se peeks sometimes #e co in the se? About What They Mean, non her none and secs ex mer diamond Tt. the & wing ¢ 4 r so much, When ! le for the flower @own snd the eekly pay: botets I rackets) | ‘said the Monts, The firm scomed to do a reltable the letters “2. P." and “A. P" Kindly 1a) vn em nian pre, The other day I Sod the ring ap-| tell me what these letters stand for? |, "DO you find automoblling a health: 4g” great tove-a jon—and praised and was was worth M, H, | ful form of exercise? rhapsodize over Fate and the mating nly $5 or $50, er cent, The letter atand for “European Pian’ addition for time payr nen the ring !e end “American Plan.” elaine nosis . " ges and lo yearn for @ siinpler, mo re natural iwother's our times. What is left of them is but a memory, and memory is not | Sor "aile-wn!’ ale "issee eo'mgn Satna het ver | heiress of countless millions, thought to make wise men merry, as well as fools, my going out penniless into the world to earn my Uving—I, who cannot dress myseif or do my hair up| i a upon my dead. him, but you do not hear of the thousands | 2°? me as helpless es a babe in tte cradie—they knew, they knew! alele of « |= ae walke as | have to now,’ Anat WW o\\ ey You ARE SPENDING Too MUCH MONEY on Your HAT. | WISH | You'O LET ME Pictly ONE FoR You NEXT TIME [ The Journal of a Ne a those days among the forests af oaks waa still tender in another heart be- sides mine; would at least joy in the knowledge that the one kiss given at Cheeni tural jife,| the turn of the road under the dying ‘manivnetions) to the eidedy Duke of| sunset wag unprofaned and sacred. who is Deirese bunting An Instead, “instead, Usten to this, oh, tee World without the bars of gold, they will fall io lo os ‘ ee ew einen val |deck me in white satin, soft Mnens, a tac a love And reigns heal to the glidertné | benutitu! laces, priceless Jewels — from the pearl embroidered slippers (fitting By Alice Eldridge. RTNOPAIS OF PRECEDING CHAITERS Tecomes eugaged lye > swperrise eome work oD By Maurice Ketten. w York Society Girl ] The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday. March 24, 1911: ‘ Beat It? CHECK: | THANK Yo YouR HAT 1 Sir’ WOOrx PA22A2A es AURAY,; | symbol, pearls are tears and tears Will) canndt understand. Oh, eave me from be my portion from that day om, at) thts Iast cruel agony! least in my heart sf not upon my cheeks) | I think my last cry of agony must —to my dark head, and there, under @)have echoed out into the wild spaces of crown of pearl encrusted lace so fairy- | the world. 1 could have killed myqelf | Uke it will seem ike @ mountain mist, | when I last wrote, killed this fair body | my Diack hair will be colled for the last instead of going forth for the living sacrifice to which we within the cage ef death they plan for me, Only it seems | gold are le@ forth. | @ coward’s part, and as long as I can | Oh, Bashford, Bashford, kill your pride keep my senses they cannot force me to and come to me. You do not Imow, you | be that craven thing. I wtll hold my CHAPTER VII. HAT can I do? I think wild’ of flying—but tt is madni If 1 defy them I have not cent of money in my ow rivht; {f Tobey them I am the It ts a Give an By Ethely When Destiny Lets T ie all natural law," said) the Cynical Ma: ‘The | drop of hydrogen floats! @round thl it comes in| - contact with the drop of| oxygen. They meet. The result? A glimmering dewdrop, ts prismatic raya | sunlight it clings | to the petal of @ flower. @ sen mentalist picks up the remult of cau and effect and calls it love. Mere nat- Ah, they were wise to} ) the Duke of Rutherford is to be my hushand, I am to be led, as white | and cokt as my bridal gown, up the long xd's church; the words, almost | the most beautiful words in the Engl#h | ashing in th language, are to be sald over our bent the mad mockery of tt all! I hope my heart wi! dle that day, 1 would to heaven I could be carried up ural te that aisle, sii] and white in my coffin, / «sq jove, then, is made up of one-| the flowers plied high upon the altar | ening gr tion and two-thirds pro roat wreaths and wonderful roses per) pinquitye” 1 asked with interest. fuming the whole church—but not for &|” wpyact weddin ra funeral, Art T tell you! segigarconted with imagination,” I it would » a happy eral; I tying | added agrecatiy. 7: within my ou! you jh he deed. ” bid vy r pe ne i Lain . . ne a Sugar-coated with {magination,” ap- oo erhaps among the flowers! od the Cyntoal Man. wmulle of the altar there would be rosemary—/ ” ” ) I have known you ever eince’’— rosemary for remembrance. ? Then I would know the memory of| . Women always grow personal in Cs y °F argument,” murmured .the Cyntoat | Man, Break! a were young and good-looking,” I Tefleotively, Break! Break! “Bure! | never did take many) of twin souls, and aN that sort of thing, But what about BIN Gykes and ? Copsright, 1911, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World). have known you ever since you | nee." | physical elements, head erect, I will face what the morrow | d Take | Herself Be Cheated. brings; I will go bravely through the leaden days and dark; I will fight a good n Huston Nancy? Where was Deminy when Nancy fell in love with Bill?” fight no matter how my heart breaks or my feet grow bloody over the cruel path. 1 will not craw! upon the earth a pitiful, | “All Fate! I said serenely. “Bil! used to thrash Nancy, and Nancy wi the type that liked it. He was broken creature, £0 help me heaven! So I orderd my horse, and tolling the groom to keep far behind me I galloped into the park, desperately, madly. I was on Whirlwind and I exalted as I felt his great plunges under me. @ blood | | Pushed to my head; all the devils af the world entered me awl tore around and around, my white face set, my hands firm, guiding a beast that was as wild | ae 1. man,’ and sho was proud of his mus-| cle. Tt he had been the quiet, gent manly type Nancy would probably have taken to Billingagate and teo much Oeer.” cruel torture, Oh, 5! wome:, ‘rea to | “And Desdemona?” | Live and love, pity me; I ask the sym- “Same thing, No one interested her | pathy of a woman's heart, witch I have | ti Fate brought her Othello. She had | never known. | her gorgeous love story—romance ——— | tragedy—shotlight and slow | Then he smothered her and—curtain!) | PY @ dq gevi lie + tditor {| | | you understand {t !# not all ease and | comfort within the cage of gold? We are | prieoners, inflicted with an Infinitely | gruel and poultices for Othello’s rheu- Oh, world, world, have I made you feel pone of the pain l suffer? Mave I made Destiny know her stagecraft too well to have De-demona poking around with } py Joan a. ovo yo it EL ee “But Desdemona wanted the Reugn Rider type, and when he came along OU can Jearn much from the rab- he Mea the pin. Any other gentle. | bit; let your ears be longer than of sorappy tendencies woutd have | your tongue, and thore will be no tale to just as wen!” speak of behind your back, ot proved. People rarely love the type that has been the deal. There the psychte call of foul to soul HEN George Fork was arrested! Yesterday he bad to’ show tires! wars before the Judge woul he w 4. i the attraction, Like | believe does not attract like, There ts abso- lutely no rule to go by. Your oxygen OY HARSH eaye that hts first mar-| and your hydrogen’ will always form riage waa a success after the firat| the dewdrop when united, But no ¢wo|two weeks, but he don't think his pres-) women loved two men in Just the ent wife ever will quit him. same way and for the eame reason. It is an attraction that ts beyond AVID CRAUM has overworked him science and beyond philosophy. That, acit so by tryin’ to keep out of is the reason love is@ theme that never, work that the doctors have advised him | wears owt. Tt carries through all the | to get a job and rest. arte-musle, sculpture, Mterature—and, — ‘ ft 1@ old as life and new as those val- UITH a@ coincifence happened thir It ts not an attraction of week: Hetty Teliings sald that Mrs. It is an indefinable | perks wuz goin’ to get a divorce and | attraction of @oul and body and mind | we got word this morning that it ts the | and heart. And of the why and ithe | trum, whither we know than nothing. | —-——~_ Onty that generally opposites attract) WOT THE TURTLE’S FAULT. | each to each, As. for tnstance, I am) tr, Mareynew (a little crosaly)—This reasonable, amta quiet—a nice, | ' Fi equate @isposition gonerally, And ao | S0UP Agnes, doesn't seem to taste much | rou and I have been good friends for | years.” wr Marrynew—I don't @e0 why, | rightful Duke. hakespeare's ove Stories PaysoNnTERHUNE. Copyright, 1011, by The Prem Publishing Co. (The New York World), NO. VIII.—ROSALIND and ORLANDO, in ‘‘As You Like It.” OSALIND was the only daughter of a French Duke whose younger brother, Frederick, had usurped his dominions. The 1ightful Duke had fied to the forest of Arden, where, with a few faithful friends, he ved as a. outlaw. But Frederick had kept Rosa- ¥ lind at court as companion for his own daughter, })» Celia. There was a courtier of Frederick’s named Oliver de Boys, son of an old friend of the A, Oliver had @ younger brothe: Ge ‘Orlando, whom he hated. He hit upon a plan (/ to get rid of this youth, A famous wrestler, Charles, visited the court. Charles, who offered to meet all comers, had the evil repute of slaying many of his opponents tn wrestling bouts. Oliver persuaded Orlando to wrestle with this mur- ROSALINO derous champion. Chai oars The whole court gathered to watch the match. Rosalind, seeing how young and fragile Orlando seemed alongside his formidabie antagonist, besged the youth not to wrestie with Charles. But Orlando was stirred by her plea into a resolve to wrestle and to win. At sight, he and Itosalind had fallen in love with each other. The bout began. Rosalind, with white lips and an- guished eyes, prayed for Orlando's safety. Orlando not only held his own, but threw Charles. Directly afterward he fied to the forest of Arden to escape death at Oliver's hands. Frederick, weary of hearing the people praise his mece, ordered Rosalind into banishment. Cella insisted on going with her. The two eet out—Rosalind disguised as a shepherd boy and Cella as & peasant maid—to join the rightful Duke in the forest. Arrived there, they could not at first find Rosalind’s father, 0 they bought @ little woodland cottage and waited until] chance should enadie them to meet the extied Duke. Orlando had been luckier than they. He haa found Rosalind'’s father end had attached himself to the latter’s retinue. But the young lover's mind end heart were full of thoughts of Rosalind, He could not enjoy the jolly forest life, but spent his time wandering idly about dreaming of the girl he loved and carving her name upon the trees, He even scrawled love sonnets to Rosalind and pinned them to tree trunks, One day Orlando and his disguised sweetheart met. Noticing the supposed shepherd boy's resemolance to Rosalind, Orlando told her the story of his hopeless love. She laughingly suggeated the following odd cure: She bade Orlando come every day to eee her; to’ imagine she was Rosalind and to let her, by a show of coquetry, tur his love vows for the absent girl into weariness. He laughingly consented. Soon afterward Rosalind met her father. He 414 not recognise her in her boyish costume. Nor did she tell him, yet, who she really was. Instead, when he asked what her parentage had been she merely answered that it was quite 00d as his own. ‘ At last, tiring of the pretty sylvan comedy, Rosalind promised Orlando that if he would come next morning to her cottage the girl he loved would be there awaiting him. When Orlando doubted her ability to do this she sald she could accomplish {t by magic, as her uncle was @ sorcerer, She ended by bidding him Gress in his best clothes and to bring the rightful Duke and his followers to the wedding. Orlando carried the invitation to his master. The Duke was amazed at-the idea of a shepherd doy being able to bring his daughter Rosalind from court. But he and the others went to the cottage. Ragalind, still in Aisguise, welcomed them and asked the Duke if he would give his The Duke consented gladly, for he had gfown fond of A Girl's Disguise. daughter to Orlando. the young exile, Rosalind vanished and soon reappeared, dressed in her former court robes. She knelt before her father and implored his blessing. She told him the whole story of her banishment and masquerade, adinitting her love for Orlando. The Duke, overjoyed to see his beloved daughter again, joined the lovers’ hands, They were married in @ woodside chapel. Soon after the ceremony a messenger arrived from court with news that Frederick, while on his way to Arden to murder his exile brother, encountered a hermit who had converted him. Frederick had naw become @ monk and had restored the duchy to its rightful ruler, : The Day’s Good Stories A Joke That Fa led, LIPGON--Young Fatty got the leagh turned againat him in his little foke agaauss the Blaze Fire Insurance Company. A Central Poirt. N (ituwtration of the charsoter of the town of I Napoleon, Ind., en anecdote was related in my boyhood. | Fopson—How? eaatenetaea whe wes rise paon——He insured 600 cigars, amoked them ri ad then sent {0 a claim on the ground that thes were destrored by fire. Tlopaon—And thes laughed at hiin, 1 suppose? they bed bin arrested om & the Hoosler State and beyond. “If 1 want to go to Indianepotis, what road taket"' he aaked. my, Jou @ to Napoleon and take the road ¢o If 1 want to go to ee fc —_ “to! tor Sayed and take. the road. emuth- : od - Th> Oniy riops. xe [ want to go to Bt, Lonel’ owas a great bore, and was talking to « Why, you @o to Napoleon end take the Ne. crow! about the election. He said: tional Road wea." “Aol #9 on throw a lone “Punco ia a goct man; he is capatie, ist, with Napoleon as the starting point of each | honest, tention ten He will make At last the men asked in deweir | the very find of M, je cowl, He once eared wy, life from drownin 1 Row, etrenger, supose I wanted to go ? realy an ne you WARY to ore Buneo el to, “IT do indeed. I'd no anything to ee Bim ‘The ott + id the bo: 7°, trenita:ion fever igt anvhody iraow he eared iWfe,"" counseled the solemn faced tas, —~/Pi-Blta. HE plain ot wored skirt és @ favorite, It {a well adapted toe variety of materials, but ts especially to be commended for the heavier wash- able ones, auch es linen, pique and pep- Mn, ‘This skirt te made of embroidered pique and t# un- trimmed, but a plats skirt of plain fabriq finished with band or hem of contrast. {ng material is ex- ceedingly sinart thie season and the mage él is well adapted 4e such treatment The skirt ds cut to six gores and the closing can be made either at the left of the back or at the left of the front, The quantity of maerta! required for the medium size is 6 1-2 yards 27 inches wide, 8 1-2 yards 96 or 23-4 yards 4 inches wide, Pattern No. 6082 ig cut tn sizes for a 22, 24726, 28, 80 and 92 inch waist measure, corcee ® eoe se Six-Gored Skirt—Pattern No, 6982, NAA =< RRR How Call at THE HVENING WORLD MAY MANTON PASIOWs ie BUREAU, Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or send by mat! to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO,, 132 5. T a Obtate }y, y, wenty-third street, Send ten cente in coin or stamps for oach pattern ordered, John. I let the turtle swim around in These IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always “Which means?” gurgied the Cynical tne kettle unti! the water was nearly jspecity aise wanted. Adé@ two cente for letter postage if in a Man with apopleotic aymptoms, hot Patterme }iurry, nodded, "Exactly!" I thing!—Puck, enough to scald the poor idan

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