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CES> world. { Pottiehed Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 83 to 63 | Park Row, New York. 4. ANGUS SHAW, Pres. and Treas, JOSEPH PULITZER Juntor, Sec'y. | 63 Park’ Kow, 64° Park Tow, | Che Second Claes Matter. Entered at the Post-Office at New Yort: ar | Rates to The Evening |) For England and the Continent and | » a —- ord forthe Un ete AN eS dtr in, {he International | 4 dA Canada Poet a nions f did Meare an 3.50 One Year ine Month. $9.85 One Nomen | VOLUME 51....... shoes | a ISHOP GREER, addressing the maas-meeting at the Metropolitan Opera-House on Sunday, sai ‘One thing ie sure, hereafter the laws as to fire pro- tection in New York must be enforced, not for a few weeks or a few months, but for all time, faithfully, t continuously and effectively. If this is not done, the ” responsibility, the sin, is on the public—it is on us.” | This sounds well. It contains an important measure of truth. | As @ means of rousing popular sentiment and confirming popul resolution in favor of better protection of factory workers, it is | justifiable rhetorical statement. But it is not strictly accurate. Un- | ' der our political system neither blame for past negligence nor respon- | sibility for future vigilance rests upon the general mass of citizens. | Jt vests solely upon the officers elected to perform the duty, sworn | to perform it and paid to perform it. | We live under a representative government. Our laws cannot be enforced by mass-meetings as in pure democracies. We cannot | rightly hold the people responsible when the official fails in duty. It is well to arouse an efficient public sentiment, but that senti- ment should not permit any evasion of responsihilily hy those upon whom the law places it. eee AT SIXTY-FIVE. i R. ELIOT, in explaining to a friend the main-| ' tenance of his vigor at seventy-seven years of age, 8 “Since I was twelve years old my sports have been walking, riding horseback, driving, row- ing and sailing, to which, after I was sixty-five years old, I added riding a bicycle. I am still good for all these sports in moderation, and still enjoy them.” The most interesting feature in this statement is that of ac- quiring the art of bicycle riding at sixty-five. It is not infrequent ; for men to carry into hale old age the exercises and sports to which the muscles were rendered supple and strong in youth, but it is rare, indeed that a new physical aptitude is developed after manhood is past and the decline of life begins. Tt appears there is nothing of human excellence impossible to | } the venerable scholar. He lures old age to exercise and leads the | way, making a record in this respect that even professional athletes | can hardiy equai. | -* ge { PRAISE FOR THE POLICE. T a meeting of an association of property owners | on the west side resolutions were adopted | “commending the police for the efficient man: | ner in which they have “detected and taken! into custody the men who have recently been| terrorizing storekeepers on the west side and committing robberies at the point of the pistol aud assaulting unfortunate victims,” | Coming at this juncture of the controversy between Mayor | Gaynor and Magistrate Corrigan as to the prevalence of crime in|A Little Love Now and} the city, the resolutions will appear to many people more like irony Then | than compliment. Nor will such opinion be without justification, for ; 7 ay almost every day brings new reports of robberies and assaults, east | A Aocan eye side and west side, uptown and downtown, indiscriminately, AND THON Still, the plain meaning of the commendation ought not to be Aiea nia oF istaken or distorted. That the general body .of the police force WoOoe ts doing the best it can under adverse conditions is indisputable. ak eae ;, :. out saying, the 't is only fair that the fact should be recogni#ed and appreciated, world ov Love The resolution of west side men is, therefore, a well deserved con- i the leaven tribution to the discussion of the day. hea aenieiine chic Ain A ; Alms iparete NE TRENE LOEB]e}] (at people thi ‘ound ba of 8, ROBIN AND BELMONT. In other words, LOVE 19 THE LOAF | (or LIrR AND | A SLICE Now, {t comes to pass that no leaven Is needed in the courting days or in the honeymoon stage. The man ZACH OF Us XN ROBIN says Mr, Belmont told him he had “better get out of tailroading or something would happen to him,” and he intimates that the “happening’—the failure of his bank and the thetic, almost automatical without arrest. of himself—was largely due {to the SMHENKING about tt, If she scraten her} z shi ot ‘ "poor ittle finger, why, mercy! It Just %* machinations of the gentleman who made the Pre- must be loved well again, so tt must! diction, For, tsn't 1t HER Ii finger? And We huve here a good opening f ; ee doesn't it belong to HIM, &c., &e. Hl a opening for a first class mystery story of nut sometimes, brother dear, 1 am real li ar more involved and interesting and possible than any that those days are lik! romance of robbery ever told, “the qnowa of last winter, They are ris oe P gone and with THEM that ts good and Robin's words are not to be accepted as virgin gold of unalloyed beautiful. Wor mark you, man may truth, Nevertheless there is much in the way of corroborative gub- LOS! THE HABIT of toving, quite the mf ' rend ; am ny other habit. He may get stance to sustain a suspicion that high finance sometimes interweaves ee! Le stence, & ‘ fe ws tself with crooked schemes, and then resorts to strange methods of ANG ANUA be the etting rid of its allies when need comes. Just enou Nieg tite aon whirlpool of hur TY the necessity to love 1s @ neceasity in this pur- igh of credibility a vin r ttaches to the charge, theref: . ite pe si ches fore, to make it worthy of careful in- vestigation, Moreover, we can never than we ought to know Joarn more about Medical Ignorance. we Letters From the People Sunrennnrnneennnennmencenacnrenrne ly ie an Puses Leta Vather, and on roofs, 1 think tt “tar more 1 am a young { 7 ad thing on clothestines wixteen « 4 es. And Ator ve any girl frie / tape Als nen we | t girls A asice ald to ther vy i : wi need you?" and "y 1 better « ‘ HOUSEWIFE home.” And y got ton ridges. @ waik he seuids ‘ eu eW t stand it. M t - a 1 pens y and I think need « rey 1 py lie ls the sane ¥ ® distor Mathesline FF ‘ ax a ection “Doctor, Is It true that Weiler rab: To the BAilor of The Ereniog Worl mary tien bite are unhealthy :’ 1 don't know. |'n to attend on regard t in court, i © cables | wae never called 5 BRIDGE ENGINEER. 48 HARLEM FLAT According to Cropsey. By Maurice Ketten. Pawate WATCHMAN PEACEFUL CITIZEN GOING OuT AFTER Sun R15E (ono DaREDS Hee | A nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnsnenmnennnamnnanenens BED What Every Husband Knows 3% By Sophie Irene Loeb} Here een enennnnanannnnnnnnnnannannnannnnnnann nanan nA Annann nn nannnnnnnrananannanrannnnnnnrafe @uit of happiness which we are all en-/It 1s the decree of the ages, And the kaged in, The little woman may go on| experience of the ages teaches that she day after day doing her DUTY quite as| who side-steps this rule usually awakens A matter of course and at times she will|to the realization of one or two things. wonder why Ilfe moves on in tie SAME| She either loses the object of her kroove—why the girlhood days were go| seeking or that object is somewhat of happy and the period when she wes|@ Weakling. He ds the fellow that 1s termed a bride. Why? Because ALL | pointed out as “Mary Smith's husband.’ was love then. | On the other hand, he may be the it when life adjusts itself to the; STRONG end of the partnership and Y order and affairs become orderly | May reason, as many do, that “a man and quiet In the way they should go, (ave to settle down" after the words the little love god Imocks tn vain. There} of “Will ydu take this woman?” and are various reasons, [that he ought to “cut out the fooilsh- No matter how EMANCIPATED wo- | nese. ’ man may become—ny matter how much! No, she may walk slde-hy-side with man—/ishness-in those OTHER days and it no matter how "EQUAL" she may be{is the fool who follows his With man, one thing is certain; SHE{NATURAL bent “Fven as you and 1,” MAY NEVER BE TILE PURSUER IN not throttle the call of love GAME OF Lov) the Joyous battle of winning !s but she all the y Io you s nat te! After all true tn a mea She IS the accesory {realm of human both BEFORE and APTER the fact.|/ning game is NEVER WON. Happi- ¥ Uso all her woman's wiles to| ness is the fleeting phantom whose ; and 1 dear man, basks in| presence we only realtze APTER he it all and forgives her, \nas wafted on his way. But tn them real love making | ‘The Joy in fishing ‘# not in CATCH- HE must ever world without end,/ING the fish, but in the nibble of the Amen, TAKE THE INITIATIY He | batt. The J love is not in posses- trust lead, All women with a ser ston, but in the process of RETAINING self-respect cannot but recognize that.,that which was sought. you didn't think {t was the fool- wite nd does | atter any- | over. time, the ts sald and done, in fluctuations the w re, eo 0) Reflections of a % &% % Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland York World), hachelur but: copsriatt, Jd, by The rem Publishing Gy. (ibe VERY man hopes to dte with his tons ont E A man aluays speaks of the girt from whom he didn't ave as "The little woman I MARRIED!” Marrying @ man “to reform him,” means sacrificing your life here on curth fora slim chance of meeting him in heaven, Love ts misery, sweetened with imagination, aaited with tears, spiced with doubt, coated with novelty—and swallowed with your eves shut. Distance lends enchantment; and a wife's trip to Europe lends a@ man plenty of time for another enchantment, Marriage late it, no matter how often they try. is like medicines some people's sys When the modern wife gets used to her beyin tu make excuses to “yo out and gee a woman,” every evening trouseretter dovht A woman is like a habit; hard to acquire, but difficult to luse, like a kitten, easy tu capture, but hard to hold. A man falls in love to slow music, and wakes up to rag-time, | | ; ms simply WON'T assimic A man is Fenrir The Jarr Family The Coronation May as Well Be Called Off! For Mrs. Jarre Refuses to Take a Look at It. Copyright, 1011, by the Brew Publishing Co, IF You WEAR WEAPONS WEAR THEM UNCON CEALED (The New York World), By Roy L McCardell. wt ite only Permitted at places of ce RS, STRYVER'S going to the] ity se gon gen Re the oftee \ M coronation,” sald Mes. Jarl was saying that when’ a women Ht | “and from the TORE Te SOWA cigeretio in a Harlem beer garden the | Lu dott other night the waiter went over to ink #he WAS GO| ier and asked her if she sought she e crowned | . Personally | I don't see why. You know we saw the King of Eng- Jand when we were 1a Br “Mrs, Ste ettes, too," dway hetel. ver tries to smoke ¢igar- said Mrs, Ja t least she has @ jewelled cigmrette case jang- Ung with her pencil and tablets and vanity box, 1 su ® that in ir abroad, and } @ effort of hers to im ke herself a Sean Httle, slender ma among the Pngli« men the no- with whiskers get+ | a1) and aristucce when she gets to ting baid."* | London, but i might as well herself, She'll get nowhere and go with nobody but silly, rich Ameri can women who ave going uver to aee the coronation, “To hear the “Witekera get-| ting bald?" asked | r. Sarr. | "You know what I mean,” repited Mrs, Jarr, “You don't take any interest in anything I eay. -You only make fun, % you'd think they would be in tho frst sea: eupecially when the subject tea dignified minster Abbey duiny ie. one like royalty, But I will say that his | when all they wil! seo of {t | Mile tsn't my fdea of @ queen, Why cession from nop «windows she's very plan and unintereating, and | jircq tor the day at extortie they do say that the Queen Dowager Alexandra is far different looking from her pictures, She hasn't permitted | Before [4 m ke 1 would study up the covetry, Its very fun to me that picture of herself to be printed that ha8! women who are so ‘prominent in he been taken within fifteen years, But ‘ | Daughters of the Revolution sho WAS a good mother, and she never, | Liew Le Mati ie if ridteulous uistory of my own Colonial Dames should be the very ones never would have anything do wl! her husband's friends! Well, 1 don't | ‘© ‘Use over to London and spend blame her for that. Tt isn't queens Fssit vcneese fal alone who have to fight shy of their et echt si My personages Who husband's fri would nev 5 or Queen is ve some style about s! Queen Viciorla, t div too, ‘ced people to be | F presented t and‘she w basta her husband, who, #0 our idea of Wings and Queens ts n, never did an that they should ‘ » floor walkers tmportance except to have (ors ris, oh?" satd Mr. Jarr, named atter him. that, but it’s an awful deal bet his son “y, kK to one's queenly dign frailties (over stupld, peo} al blood and much fuss ie Net in rc to see £0 jo of no presen: r than to have the reputation King Edward, had:* of roya on his piled Mrs. Jarr. good lady of her, “You wouldn't care to see the coronas flood of words to are ex-/tion, then? asked Mr. Jarr. tremely censorious, I should say." “1 wouldn't ss the street to see “At least 1 am a good American and said Mrs, Jarr. Mot a toady:” said Mra, Jerr. “And! “Would cross the ocean to eee what has tho reigning family of Eng-! ie aeked ¥ ¢ | 1and ever done for me? What dol care) «ygost certainly not!” eala Mrs, Jarr. for them? The men are insignifteant }«11) teave that to such toadies to the vonien dl atid the’ women are posittvely | 5. ng'ish, who snub them, despise them ely. | and laugh at them, as Mrs, Stryver and “Lese majesty!" cried Mr. Jarr. “Bo- Aswan | sides I wouldn't be so bitter about it ¥ | the royal family of England might hea: wee th fr is farerateh of it and be extremely distressed,” TES TREC HUSAC RES THOE “L auppose you think you are sare| Ae EHEC GARTH AT HSE castic!” sald Mrs. Ja But you know | *4 SNE TOMAR uu July. co VD me over from May care to ve there, ee well as Ido that English women of of sendi tie upper classes smoke cigarettes, and, You won't you know that even YOU are preju- | alone.” | @iced against that, although {t's getting, “Wel! | Rearly as bad !n this country. Women! do me & remarked Mr rr. “Be: smoke at the one Woman’ , and | sides, I'd to see the look on Mr \e min restaurants. I think it's scan-/Stryver's face when she + * over datous:” Ke ——---- 040 — T think the sea voyage would ere! Restaurant Prices Fifty Years Ago or when M es over wadde glan rice Hat. on menu, he sighs bi “good old days” resiauran | | | tterly }: 80 every husband knows that to ost of CHEP ape a when the sire KEEP THE FIRE ALIVE he must add] it as tower, Wo a Eee 1¢ fusl that was willingly given in the ab aa fara en: Many think that the coals |) theo Anse, WhRacinanie Roast beet. of creature comforts, the balm of beau: | olor" 8 mil to ee aii low enough | Rae ite tiful clothes, the matches of pleasure Tee et eee ein wage earnara | Rea te Monet cli seeking—these things will suffice, ay ° ” Hs] Chicken Ble Perhaps they will for a time, But) rere ig the vill of fare—prices and all DT ets Meet sou 3 “after a while they consume themselves | LRN Paes rere «Esty Tam : and leave only ashes, But a little love tel is atill doing business, | cam Hee s at the RIGHT time, the time when t Mable tol mer datele iimune [aoe spirits are low, the time when the woul) god ting with the head walter if ee ER. of her needs food, the unexpected time | 41, try to pay for your dinner on the erioin steaks cl med, ost <these, Oh, friend, are:the Emerald ori. laned in the following old menu: | Portes house s Bd ga Isles, whose growth 1s never stunted {or seared, cots 90 this hit der WORD, TILE KISS, the look of appre | Pork atenk on, the clasp of sympathy, It gets! ¥ y othe MATERIAL things | }iemor chops Ham ana. 3 Put or bolk \ WOMAN'S A WOMAN ror {A'THAT AND A THAT AND A’THAT, | ——eee |} Hedgeville | Editor at marel was hia em. A Matter of Interest. Serene onecr teh Tae By John L. Hobble te: thoes baa arioeh | cane Faroe, Ihe aaron Cette itch ne day 8 ae Hite incident a8 Okt man, Wik hal teovered 9” | " Wanted to take a ride, hited one of yey . |CAEORGE FORIS saya that there are (0m te naniel fleve. him, tout. tha ee, sud Asay | ao many outsiders gittin’ into poll- | ; eo clty and atow him the jwinte of a feller can't moke a livin’ | nicer, as got some office, iat and down another out of tt unless he ON'T crittciue a dog's nose Mees there, He Exasperating he has a black tail , sayet 060 Nem en he drove beck to the Lote a ay ree frome , and lus only reward R°* HARSH says that lls wite is #0 wing Post. contrary that when he accuses her of tellin’ the truth ahe His Modesty Explained. . chided Mire, Stubb, im 4 a will never finish at that rete’* bd semored the cobwebs from bis Bend A weary emp! | ALF of the world may not know a m the office, aa 1m © machinet"* | IIOW the other half tive, but they er, W a anciis iaust know WHERE tn order tu oo'levt 4 weve a wachine you would the rents. z Mo Stubo washed ie lw your second th think a whole 1 > . | The Art Here Is a Set of Rules for Husbands. th hing. OME presumy an published a, “Woman at > have wh te ICKENS, taught us how to leugh. b } La ach anti Roabtrrd OU Rte enn ee ea eee leit are one of which rar wage then Out > t have, livstence, walsh peared win iat a very guy werld, (acknowledge gracefully that thy hus | Noi) fr ;Tt was, L admit, sald Lord Rosebery |band knows more about some thiigs| Another commandn runs: “Re. lin a receqt udd fomenncre abour {than thou, After all, thou ave not lis ‘ that the nite tatty ! lox j fallible," hev beauty end eo time of the coronation ueen y ane but when we read the the | A wxecond and sY e, always worwhip Wheve | te was, ¢ sive | . 8 , |ture of that tine we see little trace of | for wives was, ive in g00d lady 7 fees y arguments nd, “equality foveve come in If Ming ¢ ould amuse’ anybody. ‘ s renter m ay superior to | WOMAN Not only has privileges becaw The old Jokes, the Jokes of Scarron | always consider Hit ay ‘“ {sue Is a woman, but ts decidedly aus and the’ Restoration dramatists, and | te 5 perfor to man? Su the strong-minded sven the humor of Fielding and of js was too much for Mreneh femin- | Sufracist would sparn privileges of gex. Jdsmith, no longer provoked laugh- !st# and no wonder, Que lady Mn In auother rule the lady seemm to but fn this island, washed as Jt fx, the presumptuou man indignant! ome sly knowledge of her alaters. i Tavd Res feta eatd, by The wealer ger ty ter 4 Sou Gesirest mount | melancholy ocean, laughter is @ phy | ties; {t has also rights, Memintsm is. I hy wife to cone to the seaaide; necessity. Aud, after all, am [van and nothiag will stop it, The ASaIA Se REOPRAN, & hollday ot right in waying that a laugl, a real | weaker eex {x tho equal of the sterner, | 1) OMYMniauel eat thls le a very mil laugh, at any Mterary product, except, Equality forever! Hoe.e are the com My ARPURCAE tae aes Rees, Waenlne jof Course, a comedy on the stage--any mandments whic! women opp \o | for husbands: "Man Was croated before laugh over & book that you reading those of men.” ‘woman asa preliminary sketch for (ia masterpiece, Remember, then, O bus- Vand, thet theu ert but « rough érett.” is almost the rarest luxury which you i enjoyt © rules tor hus than logic: lady then gives hands with more spirit