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The Evening World Daily Magazirie, Friday, April 7, 1911. The GES orld. 7th 2 Pobtishing Company, Now, 88 to 43 r w Yor OSsrErit PUL Tt Juntor, Seo'y. Oa Pa 1 O ANGUB AAW, aa} marke Re % (te eer —_aon a Entered at the P Often at ‘ork s ndet tone Motter, Gabeertption Rates to The Evening | Por England and tue Continen® and orid for the United Star i} All Countries In the International end Canada, 1 1 Unter ost Year ‘ a M‘LORD, ili THE CARRIAGE £ WAITS alla ere Bas Mon VOLUME 5 09.75 185 NO. 18,126. ON VACANT LOTS. RK COMMISSIONER STOVER has issued an it lots to grant the use aygrounds for ball games during ppeal to owners of va of them as p the summer. In a recently published statement “Private citizens and as the National High- have assured me that they on the m c organizat ways Protective Socie ite to the will gladly contr: season of 1911. Backed by the support thus assured, the plea merits a sympa- thetic consideration on the part of the y ns appealed to, Expe- rience has shown it to he unwike to permit ball playing in the parks. The trampling of players and of spectators in multitudes kills the grass, and, moreover, the large spaces and groves of the parks admit | support of such ball grounds during the the resort there of hoodlume and toughs and the commission of gross offenses a, t morala and decency, Neither of these evils ean develop around ball ames on vacant lots. Such groups as gather there can be readily supervised by t the police. ‘The Give the plan a { the Commissioner is, therefore, a fair one, es THE UNSOLVED PROBLEM. JOHN JOWETT, of the Fifth Avenue Presby- tian Church, addressing himself to his new pas- yrate with the enthusiasm of a genuine zeal, enid if New York in his sermon on Wednesday night: “It is a great caldron in which all races, all peoples, all creeds are mingled. Its crying need, its unsolved problem, lies in its contradictory im- pulses. The greed of wealth pinches the poor, while the generosity of wealth is giving to the poor the glorious opportunity of a new day.” The problem thus eet forth fs not peculiar to New York, but the contrast of its opposing factors is probably more glaring here than anywhere else. In no other city is the etrnggle for gold more rapacious or more crushing. In no other is the gift of gold for all hamane purposes more liberal or more elevating. . It is the old truth that men would rather be generous than be just; would rather give $1,000 in free lavishnees than to pay a fair day's wages for a fair day’s work. To some extent the churches are responsible for this. They have persistently over rated the merit of charity. A wholesale campaign for justice might help to solve the problem. $e NOT THAT WAY. REPORT from Albany, after stating that the New York Telephone Company has not obeyed the law requiring it to file with the Public Service Commission detailed information of operating ex- penses by districts, added that the company had stated that “ite accounts were not kept in such @ manner as would enable it to comply with the} By Roy L. McCardell. instructions of the Commission.” “MI AVE Wane Nie cree vane This explanation of failure to comply with legal requirements ein aver ars} has all the charm and all the absurdity of an ingenuous naivety. SEARETERES CAR I0; It is co “childlike and bland” it might have boen an utterance | oe of Ah Sin, } sister, who What a long series of successful evasions, dodges and defiances | BAH ! begun upon st content- She put it of law the managers of that corporation must have gone through | i ne aioe to have attained such a serenity of mind with respect to the requiro- Sune ie ross buns, ‘ow, there you ments of law and of law officers! | i begin to They have not kept their acoounts that way! and fret We are now to see what public service the Public Service Com-| the life out of mission can render in the faco of this interesting fact. hee ae Reena ds juny. "I do win your father would | give you both a good whipping.” CONVERTED CORSETs. \aabeliy coe Wectaton at conan ce NTO men, as well as unto women, thero comes aad OR something that will be accounted good tidings in the + announcement that a physician of eminence told q the members of the Rainy Day Club at the | In the Tall Wednesday meeting that, under the stimulus of re- | Timber cent aspirations for reform, woman’s dreas has |” . become more sensible, and the corset has been so changed as to be no longer harmful to health or distorting to beauty. Whether the change has been effected by a substitution of something more plisble in place of whalebone, or by such an altera tion of structure as to give it a now and less injurious form, or by some addition of checks and balances to counteract the old pernicious tendencies, was not stated, and, of course, is not apparent in the thing iteelf, Therefore it cannot be asserted positively that the long denounced garment has been either reconstructed or reformed All that can be said is that it has been “converted”; that there is no longer reason for women to weep or men to swear about i ; that having been properly put, it ie for the ladies to see that it stays put. And now for new iseues, \ POP SHORTS SAYS:— TALKIN’ MACHINES 1S ALL RIGHT BUT HE NEVER COULD UNDERSTAND WHY MARRIED MEN BOUGHT Outdoor Work, Tronuols Theatre, the B'eamboat Blo Be the Dittor of The Bveuty Wort) Joum, the Ashe Building and our Mate ‘Here ie & question I would like some | Capitol were monuments erected to the @me of expericnce to anawer for me:|/mamory of advanced oivillaation, art “What tae good line of employment for and actence—and the Almighty Dollar @ young man who wants to work out- when suoh civilization raises hades ton side for the benefit of his health?" #tories above the ean and ‘This ought to interest other readers, makes M, Milan | E ‘AULS “Otwtht To the HAtter of The F “The more adva Yzation ma Biaaeat ermy, Well, the worship of tne Ak where can I apply to find out the ser Dollar 19 heavenly compared|sonditions for entering the Board of the worship of man killing, tan't Education's nautical echool? ft?” gaye a Gamous man, "Well, if the ie ee {ont TD & Such Is Life. By Maurice Ketten. WORD LORD OuT Bi ,| LEFT The pane SHow-yes.! THEY LL Sure HAVE To CLOSE THES The Jarr Children Beg a Simple Favor; Thereby Almost Precipitating a Riot. “Johnny Rangle had hot cross buns; “Oh, never mind!" sald Mra Jarre. for breakfast yeaterday,” Master Jarr| ‘Only, what can I do with the ohildren went on, seeing no prospect of corporal| when you alt there, letting your break- punishment being visited upon him. | fast get cold, with your nose stuck in | "He brought some to school in hia|the paper? Hand it to me, Em pocket and woukin't give me any." Mr. Jarr weakly resigned the news- “I want hot cwors buns! I want hot| paper just at a point when he was up owors buns!" ered the little girl. to hia eyes in the “Crime Wave.” And “Tr wish you'd ape to them, papa,” | Mrs. Jarr immediately turned over to satd Mrs. Jarr, sharply. ‘And I don't artment store advertisements, thinks you should sit at the breakfast have hot cross buns, tabi ading the newspaper. How can " orled the Iittle boy, plucking at | the children to have any table at vanners when thelr father sets them su an example?” ext “What ts it, Wille?” asked Mra. Jarr, Mr. Jarr had gotten hold of the news-| She was roused in turn from her con- paper first. Perhaps that was what] centration of thought on “Women's ed Mra, Jarr, Tatlored Suita at $25. nh? What ts itt” & UD. repiied Mrs. Jarr. Notes That Crossed in the Mail | By Alma Woodward >) “Hot; Copyright, 1911, by the Preee Publishing Co, (The New York World), | é It ewes his son, Gerald Sterling, lives From Chesterton Gray jr., ALL AN Bene ae ee Yale, to His Father. |{ When thts gentleman teft my eyes had H been opened to some very ‘mportant! you know what's|facts, many of which I had suspected} right — another | for @ long time. } touch! 1 guess pretty soon| In the first place, Mr. Steriing tn- you'll y better have | formed me that my son was »matte coin pusher to keep mo (leader In what boasted to est fying bunch” Yale has ever known! It does beat all how money tw eaten Second, he confided to me that his son, up when you're at college—but you | Who by nature a atudious boy, had know, you can't row me for it, dad—I | fatien under MY gon's influence, much didn't want to go through! |to his deterioration! ‘This time it's for a Greek play we're) In addition to this, T discovered that | golng to give—a— classy thing—and we're | Of the numerous plays, entertainments, golng to do tt brown! I need cagh, first, |e, you have mentioned to Procure | for my share of the funds to buy prop- funds from me, only one haa taken place &o,, and then for my own ec jend that at the expense of the college. tume—and that's going to be SOME cos} I was further informed that the I!- tume, too—I'll have my photograph | >rary of the college contains every ref- taken tn ft and send tt to you. erence hook necessary to students, and I'm study Uke a house afiret I that the wonderful de luxe editions of yn’t think I'm looking as well as 1|/ Greek poets, &c., which you've ao often | might, but don't you get worried about oxpressed the desire to purchase, are tt, dad—I'll be back on my pins again really unexpurgated French volumes, soon, EQvery one tells me I'm looking | &°. pretty bad, though! | I am writing to tet you know that I guess, when you're sending the cash, |ffom to-day your allowance will be re- 'f you coukl add an extra twenty-five it @uced twenty-five per cent.—that afl would help some, I want to get several | touches will be ignored, and that your reference books that will be very useful |trip to Parla, planned for the coming to me when exams come around and a | summer, ts cancelled de luxe edition of “Horace's Ofen," No amount of pleading wMl change | The sooner you send tt—the more tt, ™y Fesolutions—so, save what you feel wil ip me. e my } to mother, {melined to spend on postage in that d!- Your devoted son, CHMSTRRTON, (Fé Always & Tn bet coming, all he ring: | suppl FATHER, From Chesterton Gray sr, to Louis, LVE RESIQNED THey ve CUT MY LINE | His Son at Yale, Rema called GDOA ane at my ation Shakespeare's: Love Stories By Atsert PaysonlIERHUNE. Copyright, 1911, us the » 14—LEONTES and iE RMION. TES, King of Sicily, grew bi: terly Jealous of his beautiful young wife, Hermione, Me fa'sely belleved that she had transferred her love to his best friend Polixenes, King of Bohemia, This jealousy was causeless. For the Queen worshipped her husband. But Leontes length resolved to question the famous De: Oracle as to his ¥ In the mean time, until a y from the Oracle ehould arrive, he ¢ the luckless and vent Queen into priccn There her little daughter, Perdita, was orn, Leontes, still blind with fury, ordered the child taken aboard a ship and cast into mid-ocean or on some desert shore, Soon after- want the messengers he had went to the Oracl came back to Sicily with a reply to the King's FORGET NOTHING. de rear , sting Co, (The New Yors World) in “The Winter's Tale!” question. The Or declared t Hermione was true to her husband, that Vollxenes was dd that Leontes was “a jealous rage ended 1 without anh if that nd." Leontes anc ared the Oracte had te camo that ‘his » Man had suddet disgrace. At this newa Hermione fell In a swoon, She and in a fow minutes one of her attendants returned to Leontes with news that the queen was dead. —_—— Now, too late, Leontes «aw how wrong he had been Phe Oracle's in his suspict Heartbroken over Hemntone's death, Prophecy. | the sought for the baby daughter he had oniered cast into : the ocean. She could not be found, The king's oruel orders for her destruction had apparently been obeyed. Leontes’ insane jealousy had thus robbed him of wife and children end had left him alony in the world. He understood that the Oracle's words about “vhat which ts dest’ referred to Perdita, And, Perdita could not be found by him, Yet the had touched Boh pherd had fo thes she wore, oby was till al! The ship that carried her away from Sicily xia, And there tho chid had been left on the seashore, her and brought her up nila own; carefully hiding the The jewels on those garments laid the foundation of dis Perdita grew ) lovely young womanhood; courted by many swains, not yored daughter of a rich aiephent, #n charm. On day Prince Florizel of Bot: om Lepntes had been go featous) chanced ty be hunting near the old shepherd's home. He met Pe her. ‘She gil quickly grew to care for Plorizel; although she 4!4 not know he was a prince, His frequent absen n court aroured suspicion, Polixenes followed young man and Going to a sheep shearing vel and Pew a ther tr es eterniy tway fell in love with oh; and threaten dita and the shey n should Prince's acquaintance. a for courtier of Leontes, solved the knotty nat the Prince and Perdita fly with lim to Sicily © offer, A few weeks later they stood before the =o SOS enters. Tho rim old ietng was at once stru . Perdita’s likeness to Hermione. The Living | At length the truth cate out, Bi by bit the chain Death of evidence proved Perdita to he the missing daughter —__-_— of Leontes. “That which wes lost’ w at last found. Leontes’ joy in finding his chilé wae marred by a fresh outbu | at memory of the way he had treated her mother. Just them Pautina, a fomne attendant of Hermione, appeared before the king, begging him to come to he: | house and look af @ statue of the late queen, Loontes obeyed | the statue he was amazed at {ts wonderful resemblance to his lost wife. Kven as he gazed, wer ng, the statue came to life. It wae Her elf. ‘The report of the queen's death 1 been ise. She had me iden from | the king's rage. I'or years she had lived under Paubna's p Hew that Perdita had been found #he had chosen this atrange way bringing he | repentant husband to her feet. She freely forga juries he | had heaped upon her and gladly consented to share his throne once more. | cross buns are not to be eaten till) Good Frida: “But they've got ‘em at Bink bakery!" whined the boy. Real Appreciation. “Can't I have some, too, mamma? E of the appurtenances of the household asked the iittle girl. O at Champ Clark ia aa. ol4 negro woman “No, you can't, smarty oat!" cried her elder bro 1 want!” Wihereat Mrs. Jarr just stayed the threatening arm of the Mttlo wird ralsed to hurl a spoon [the thing to her with the, tatty “Now, you see’ cried Mra, Jere, |haps they would bold her for a while, turning to husband and father, “re |!A¥r ,Mamuny legen asking ber mistrees for « Coy, But— We TR. MOTCITKIN anid of advertis- anquet vet ther, “You always want what vaht Mommy a rather turned hen * said Poway, oe area, tADD skzeict, you had given them the whipping when | "Why, Mammr,” sald Mrs, Curt, where are Sand: ra uldn’ “4 je | te things I gave you last week’ y T awked you to this wouldn't have hap. |e 100m | gee ro a a tn great pened! Leave the table, you bad chile | seasemsat "you tent thinkin’ I's gwine to @ren! And, just for that, vou shan’t have hot cross buns, you shan't go to the moving pictures and I am not gos ing to get you any new c ‘Thin Inst dire threat wa her recent reading of School Suits at Quarter Pr: eom|-prinesse 6 to Clore | HE Ount | = gown 18 a favor- Mut Mr. Jarre had not tone donantea'| a y ite of the season. for the oMce and tha children on thetr | This one ie made in way to school when Mrs, Jarr eaked Teeny atl Thee) Gertrude, the lght-running domestic, | long lines, the fact that to call up the baker and omer hot cross the blouse port re and slooves are out one means little Shortly afterward Gertrude came to | and the fabt thet the report that the baker was af out of hot skirt can be out elpher cross fun: | in round length or to | clear tne floor makes jut the children say the baker has it adapted both to for- plenty," satd Mrs, Jarr. | ™ hd informal oc: “Well, ma'am, that young feller In the | ee tly Dakery is ways fresh | plied Gertrude, ‘but I just te Waa a bone heat Vd slap his dirty face for sald Gertrude. | “Oh, my dear gtr!, you shouldn't have spoken like that! What will he think of your" Mrs, Jarr, “On, thi eal Gertrude. "He doesn't know {t's me. I said to him: ‘And do you know who's this talk- ing? It's Mra, Jarr "Oh, dear me!" ered Mrs, Jarr. “Why I'll have to correct | prompted | “Children’s | jained Gertrude. at's the way T t after all those fresi tradesmen on ut sa Mrs. Jarr let to the instrument and called up the baker's, | “This 1s Mra. Jerr," she began, “about | those hot cross buna.” “Ain't you hot and cross enough al- ready?” asked the satirist in the bakery. Mra, Jarr was @o angry sho felt like calling on Gertrude to reply, but she hung up the telephone reostver with « bang and nursed her wrath til] Mr, Jarr came home. It was when informed, that Mr. Jarr caliod up the bakery. “Here, you he cried. size BY yards 36 or 4\ yards 44 tf one ma terial ts used through. out; 2% yards 44 hes wide with 244 Is of flounctng 3° inches wide and 10 yards of banding to make ax Mlustrated. Pattern No, 69 es for a 34, » 42 and 44 measure. Is in # “This ts Mr. ide when mr old buns? “What do you ery When she roasts you about yours?’ came the reply. Mr, Jarre dropped the receiver