The evening world. Newspaper, April 3, 1911, Page 14

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monda am -_————— ——_ se EP ae. The Day of Rest. akespeare's PubMahed Dally Except & by, the ubiishing Company, Nos, 83 to 43 | & anus, SHAW. fre ra Fi PULITZER Juntor, Bec’ By Maurice Ketten. Probes iS. 8S hematin | 9.5.2... rian i e aie : Love Sfories $3.50 Poet 1 ¥nians mt 1 Jus: GET A Move on Nou, lone Your JOHN, ; ‘4 want) INEED Your Room For By Atsrrrt PavsonIERHUNE. LiL :30] One Month: GET up| Copyright, 1911, by the Prees Publishing Co, (The New York World), THIS IS THe ne ‘ DAYor MY TEA | _No. 12—PERICLES and THAISA, in “Pericles.” T the court of the good King Simonides & great tournament was in progress. Gallant knights from all parts of Greece had flocked thither. For the @ictor’s Prize was to be the hand of Thaisa, the King's only daughter. An unknown champion appeared, clad in rusty armor. He overthrew every knight who dared challenge him.\ And at the end of the day he was declared victor in the tournament. The lovely Thalsa was readily persuaded to wed the stranger. Indeed, at their first meeting, the two fell in love with each other. They were married and for a long time lived happily at the court of Simonides. Then to the young husband came @ message that changed the whole future for him and for his bride. He made known his real identity, declaring he GET INTO was Pericles, Prince of Tyre, who had been forced to Your CLOTHES flee from his throne and country because of the eumity of the Emperor of Greece, The Emperor, lie had Just heard, was dead. THis Minute | { THE EXTRA SESSION. ITH the assembly of Congrese in extra session | to-morrow the Democratic majority will be face to face with the responsibility of initiating and controlling legislation so far as the House is concerned. That fact in itself gives to the UY, session @ peculiar interest. The country waits to sce how the issues will be met, and with what fidelity the victors of the last election will keep their pledges. It is not expected the session will be long. ‘Uhe President aske nothing more of it than the passage of the Canadian reciprocity measures. Many members of Congress will be eager to get away from Weshington before the coming of the heat of summer. The big in- | terests that profit by protection will wish the session to pass without any alteration of the tariff. | Thus the Democratic leaders will be tempted from various points | te make no effort at this time to repeal the taxes imposed by the tariff on the necessities of life, or to inquire into the activity of the army on the Mexican border. They will make a mistake, however, if they yield either point. However short the ion may be, Democracy should not let it pass without demonstrating a vigorous policy in the interest of the people. FoR HEAVENS Saxe | AREN'T You WASHED Yer | And now Pericles could safely carry his young wife back to his own home, During the homeward voyage @ fearful tempest arose. Thaisa, who was tL sank into @ trance and all believed her dead. The superstitious eallors dared not keep a dead body on the ship. So they cast Thales into the tempeat-beaten sea. Pericles, broken tearted, left his Uttle daughter, Marina, with friends at T: s, then sailed on to Tyre Before he could return to n Marina, the girl was stolen by pirates, who bore her away to Mytilene arid there sold her as @ save. The girl's beauty and her wonder? money for her new She t goon became so famous that she atira ernor of Myt e. He fell in love with her and vowed to thougl he supposed her a mere slave instead of a wor At about this time a royal vessel touched at the sh the ship In which Pericles had jou ere he had heard sho was dead. A hich nothing could arouse him. 19 felt honored at recelyi for some mea ope ANOTHER WARNING. OUNTY PROSECUTOR GARVEN of Jersey City’ confronts us with a new warning. He believes that the storage of explosives on boats in the bay is not properly eupervised and that new legislation is needed from both New York and New Jersey. The warning is apropos to the recent and not choly from lustrious n guest as the Prince cles from hia despair, It Might charm a smile from occurrta to the ¢ he unhappy Prince. So long a tine fe t her to Peri WAKE UP Joun! iter had met that Perictes yet forgotten disaster resulting from the explosion of dynamite at (HEAR PEOPLE Ay eh Weialaas anid: tat 4 “cue: , Neue. ie’ truths Communipaw. Just after that event there was much discussion and COMING came out. i, at finding his Deloved daughter was nochus loved ¢ ¢ consented to to his some activity directed to the better regulation of the shipment of | dynamite, but it appears much remains to be done. Mr. Garven, in| fact, is reported as saying he understands that as much as thirty-six tons of dynamite is now, or was not long ago, etored on boats near the statue of Liberty. | The issue is pertinent to the keen interest now taken in the question of safeguarding factories. If the Communipaw lesson has not compelled reform in that direction, what are we to expect of what was taught by the factory fire? » Learning that she and) union, and prepared to | But, on the night be | drea.n, He dreamed tat he | temple of Diana, there, to rectte tie It was an age when dreams posed to De messager | from Heaven, Pericles obeyed the strange summons, He went to Ephesus; re the ahring of Diana, related his Back From the Dead. of his love for Thaira and of her | toward him with a cry of | | | her to consciousness, A | Phe voice of dead Thalsa:"* | The my c a, cast overboard, had deen | back SING J NESS) Wo |, Velled Priestess stood beside the altar. Ae ing, the l’riestess threw out her arms g at his feet, Vertcles re- je exclaimed tn wondering ——e¢eo- PARKS AND PLAYGROUNDS. CCORDING to experts who have been examin- ing the conditions of Central and Morningside Parks, we have been abusing those pleasure grounds almost as much as using them. In some places Ga lrerstattas’ bee @ IF "iThe Jarr Children Play a Refined Game ig eg Aygo a gh That Almost Causes an Ambulance Call | xan ta — washed @shore on the a strangers brought her back to life, Believing herself deserted by Pericles, and half-forgetting the events that had led up to her trance, she had rsolved to pass the remainder of her lonely Ife ax a Priestess at Diana's temp!» ‘The reunited couple eniled in triumph to the royal home that had ee long awaited thelr coming. the soil itself has been outworn, and, of course, a | ofa: much longer time will be required to restore its fertility. : id ? jh uld nelther royalty? I kx I played all those de- _ These are some of the bad effects of being such a strenuous By Roy L. MiCardell: x gael Eee oben cae tebe tut EE ns Pe people. We cannot play with moderation any more than we can do | carried off in a drosky through the storm by the Biack Duke Sergtus? And) Sometimes Much Alike. fe, was the dyn: “Why do you talk » woman. in New Jersey writes | r@ any animated photographs were] , a HOP RYAN was Odd Ww T G t ‘ iat s ‘ ih Fees lasked Mrs, Jarr. “This woman's pro-| heard of.” ace done wit fn am dds Were Too Great. ae in that way. British youth in their damper climate can Lol eid ein mene Hig testing against the evil influences the! “well, ACY children shail no: the constable, “but Tilt pave lay cricket or foot! on a ‘ ‘ . moving picture shows exert? Mrs. Jarr, “Of course, I have to take rere aieeg 0 i : ‘ican ball poling ging Est ines Killing the Grass, bat Li ser nis] “It'a about the children," Mra. Jarr| them ie ave pictures, becaure |'Were wiped out ty the explosion,” re- merican ball games appear to be destructive of everything in the Moa, Jarre Sne'#) went on, “She saya she has carefully |they just worry the iife out of me if |Plled Mrs, Jarr. “But Cossacks are SO rt t i eayuanaeld THEM snventigated the matter and she has |I don't, and, besides, some of the filins | Drutat with thelr w ‘ |found that the chiitren are so wild |are real interesting. There was one Palate tesa (i ut the moving ploture shows that! other day, ‘The Nihilist Lovers,’ in| erous he own a reguiar) “Hem they haven't the money to get| which a beautiful young girl threw «| se , A theates? Av "Lady| {2 tse them they are playing games|bomh at the Emperor of Russia because | ‘I didn't see It," sald Mr, Jarr, “but Audlevts Secret, Mout robbers and police and outlaws |he ordered her to marry a grand duke )[ guessed, But what have you subst!- amt "Uncle ‘Tom's/#%4 Indians and ptrates and traina|she loathed, for all her love had been tuted for the children to play, If the Cabin’ toeatres" {Wreckers and all those dreadful things.”"|sIven to Ivan, the handsome young |can't play the good old dime novel pacealy bi : does} “MY! What a discovery!” said Mr,| charcoal burner, It was MOST interest- | stuff?" i r, “Didn't she stop to think that|!ng But I do think they should not, ‘There are beautiful games that incite | Nf blouse ritw 7 . children played they were robbers and} >¢ permitted to have moving pictures to the imagini of children along culti- | 0} i rderly large city in the world, Magistrate Cor- her letter doesn't say so. She writes as] omen and pirates and Indians Jong| fil the minds of children with murders vated and ethical lines in the Perfect | yin on the city is wide open and the Mollonilg (eariroken tnottien') ore the hanging gardens of Babylon|@nd abductions,” ° ars cellanitrut emoralized, M issi Ps reyes” " si n abouto| Were opened under the patronage of potany, The | ralized. Commissioner Cropsey says there Looe Biel Beet tk be Geta aera - a : fakes paride children pretend they are Devonian or | are not enough policemen to safeguard the City | suspicions ere correct and whe does o' Silurian strata, and have tain for ages | from crime and criminals. @ regular ‘Town Hall To-Night’ theatre? forming coslsfrom maréh planta. Phat " " os ( eat jwas the game for last week. ‘The ; There are other official authorities that might RE 66 WOe Goasnit" ene put 1 moving N oO t es T h a t games the week before were ‘Hriends | also be quoted on one side or the other, | With the Flowers, ° Py and one child would | use? The news of each day with Cc rosse d in t h e Ma 1 1 | 20-8 BAPRy BAG nother one would be a| ‘tullp—t after crime by day and by By Alma Woodward brought In Duteh historical | events. Copyright, 111, by the Press Pul em for a brighter and beter w ©: hips, and the Nihilist | niepare, th neighborhood. The result is we must set our playgrounds a long way from our parks, or find some way to compel both players and spec- tators to respect the turf and have a care for the shrubs and trees, SEN EE EE a | WHAT THE NEWS SHOwsS. | AYOR GAYNOR says this is the most decent and | pocketing vinat_me T ain't th Cay madé in peas-" vith 1 and with ne and under eves of ambroid~ ered net, but almost 1 ) seasonable materials that are 8 but what would be the | Weer i the continuous record of crime In the Tall night tells the story so plainly th i i no need of consulting either authorities or statistics, ee ner Timber Criminals have become so bold in this city tl violence are commitied in apartment houses, in well lighted streets, in open public pl orderly and well setiled districts, These facts are impressed upon the public mi oR gage I y@ public mind by the om- | | ij 1 reiteration, and every citi k } ation, a ' zen knows some one in authority is to blame for them, ist alee tar | t he dates of the Wars of the! | Roses were impressed upon the childreg, too” (Phe New York World) Ge arte » Mis Ss Itn bea bit hard to bear at first, |?" 4 Mr, Jarr. From Miss Dorothy smite | eee eee ee neae Pima ta] 'Nos Tam x01 ay tt dla not in- | toMr. John Hunt, 1 | broken hearts, they | terest th ax much as 1 thought tt 1 Thee AiR ntti Reale | would,” said Mrs. Jarr, “Wille wanted | | aes : I You forgive me, don't-you? ,|to be a nettle and stick pln Sava ces “eancel | Very sincerely, | [ters But they have been ment 1 mode with you ¢ DOROTHY SMITH, | Stories of the Stars'—that ; dren's game this week, J iat robberies by oh Clee GARR » in office buildings, in aces and in trolley cars traversing We have the finest police force j ; s Ser PA) + ‘j mo .¢| angle is tn the dining room the world. Why is it not sisad with aiienea? force in ; You've hi ine, Kk of ue Taylor, | PROM MA, JOHN HUNT TO MISS} aya our W and our little Emma are zy ? javen't you? Well, he came tn unex- -- bas sd Feat 4 "8 fits DOROTHY SMITH, er ‘hts game, “ |pectedly from the West last night, I ree Ain with eeiidee Jhave known him for many| My Dear Miss Sm‘ thaw Rab do and {mprovin youre, and he has always b a close | ¢ watance A carmen tune thome “dreadta | frien > can Rortat in Vh Cus ame } rk ald Mr, Jarr, “Ilow \ 1 1 ny | “TT suppose so,"" 4 , Vheard Ly rar : ear ; tin ve W tho ginent sie eatngn. apace ofa < oan be high wasen with you so much, Not that hel the deavest girl in world, Her E f ” py, a ° ona | | s to yo Oh, no—please don't! parents objected to marrying #0 Why, one ¢ s out of the room, ; f The F aW inderstand 1 8 t er to Europe to avoid [21 the other children pretend to be dif- 4 nm start on a ace rastRAutaTd ‘ Ne . TY aonnin baagpereyy 4s. {ferent parts of the solar system, and sty first man is grant t } | dow ld he object t ou when h 1 rte her several times wi le 9 child who has been out must guess 4 But every t . |doesn't know you at all? You see, he out receiving any reply. I thought she|t™ A The “ ‘ | jany one, because he's in love w! aol Sealasnaw “ahh d from Europe, |oR catied the Milk and Johni aren , SAYS | he's in love with me—|\ Y ey eho relurned from Murope, |e ie nas been in the hall the longest ocaany y Jand now we're 1. jand sent me a wireless to meet her at| Lore emda bey Rly it It hefore he will pavs the f eer ’ n break the news gently, because £ know! Neither had [ aa, | i EL leas simple than it : ; JUDGIN BY THE VERBAL [ow surprised and pained you will be.| Of course, we're engaged. 1 would dren's mental facult ike ne oh nt Let | DUEL GOIN’ ON BETWEEN I ean see your distressed expression | like to have you meet her. You will jo; but 1 “LT, see’ sald Mr. Jar hom (aaaeemeiiacn Nan eCan: ‘ ps ours 111 BIG POLITICAL GUNS IT rgd ims, T diane and her ail that in eweet end char tpped down and peered throug iceve. seen. GODFREY 8, | mean In closing, 1 want to tell opened door, ‘Johnny Ranslo | j:, aco or ot can he attact ler c bands Greater Rink, Lew . | 4 | eae ake ing up and down from a. sitting | wantity of T required for aay yard 27 or poe GreMtee Mink, Lene t LOOKS LIKE THAT PANA=|| | im not really as wondertut as you Joyed your 80 jee BARR Up BAG AGA From a Hee Meee Oe Ta ee OTM DE ibaa ey att bid merece Pade MA CANA wr think Lam, Although you've never told You are a very lovely position in a chalr chantl: tlons, 1 yard 15 ‘inder sleeves : ever atng to \ CANAL IS GOIN TO Moh yelnrisn pei Menger ture,| i avo slase! i ten aieie!” | Mattern. mo, Gut in'wiges for a 4, 86, 88, 40 and 42 ineh bat ne " and I'm gure that soon you'l|you'll meet @ man, who {ts worthy; Suddenly Master Jarr pulled the chalr | measure. they le us ly aa th ‘ - ae BE FORTIFIED WITH t some girl you can love, maybe not| of you. jfrom under him and the victim bumped | § “Pog Cail at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHI inch figure yeep pbs h the ARGUMENTS ANYWAY. t now, son, ‘There are lots of| You may be hurt at my discontiy down hard on the floor, while witn | “e BURJAU, Lexington avenue and Twenty-third etrect, or send by, i) coat. I ride t taethane | 4 ay) r world jour frie suddenly, but you see shouts of merry glee little Miss Jarr | mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 133 E. Twenty-third street, (not often). 1 eo from Went | I will always remember you as one of| there ts ni Ise todo. In a day ured @ ful of gillk in his face, |} Obtate JN. ¥, Send (en cents im coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. Seventy-se\ eo! to West |) ef t men 1 have ever met, and|¢o you Will have forgotten all about] “Hey, you!" cried Mr, Jarr, “run out ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your eddress plainly and always One Hundr wtreet, On| reader” when lon ma will visit | me, I'm sur on the street and play policemen ond | rei specify size wanted. Add twe cents for letter postage if in a Mtiverside Drive We got to} ae : my home just as {f nothing had hap- Very sincerely, robbers! Some of you'll get epinal trou. | JPetserme ty yyy, our porthera Toe wal uaP i Be pened, | JOHN HUNT. bie trom those refined games! \ . ( 4 | f aA, — vs ™ ‘ : ee ee nT SN

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