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bins OE CON IR IR TT - The Evening World Daily Magazine, Momday, Apel! 10. Che SEE asiorio. | The Day of Rest. hoa 9 “Pamove gga, pre, tice! TONIVN rps TEE fon tory. By Maurice Ketten. eares. e Oe eee Ht Crane Use WHY JOHN! Are You} ——————__. wanem ae oar... . 63.50 One Your ........ ' $9.75 MAKING CALLS ON ne ses :: +80 One Monti: ss... (85 SKIRTS POT UME Bly MucheTITI STUN AN ivy VvNluN liv NOP TRING, ; : : | Copyright, 1011, vy the Prese Kublishing Co, (The New Yoru World), * = = | No. 15-HERMIA AND LYSANDER In “Midenmmer Nigh@s -] | Dream.”’ ! ! | PEACE AND FINANCE. | ]) PERPLEXING love tangle was brought for yy ER ROBERT PERKS, M.P., ¢ g at the | A solution to Theseus, Duke of Athens. A Greek rl te toe ei CaS ier’ c young nobleman, Dut ae hed another i country Litton CR in Mey a ese akied | euitor for her hand—Demetrivs, who had formerly i eupport of the financiers. All look to the great | been in love with Hermia’s dearest friend, Helena, and ' bank institutions in America and Great Britain whom Helena atill loved. | i to finance a war. It is not impossible that if the i Hermia's father favored Doemetrius’s euit. He \ | h epeaking countries enter into an arbitra | sought to force his daughter into the match by appeal | tion h f th cae fuse t en their | ing to a crue! old Athenian law, which gave fathere the | | treaty, the bankers of these count may refuse to open thei right to kill rebellious children. | 4 coffers to support a ecees war, and ¢ render war an im- i peesibility.” This is the expression of an opinion that is widely shared and! | The case came before Theseus, who lacked the wit to eettle it offhand. So he gave Hermia four days in which to change her mind. Hermia and Lysander re- \ ‘i i r} he Fi volu- otved to use this space of time in eloping to some H that has been in the world a long time. When the French Revolu ? CUSE_US — 7 Tuose Bors! y | Srp ware AAAS Ed Tot owes te Buy Chacy AGENTS if tion broke out it was said by many statesmen the war would not GrOING, To SHOW JueT AS BAD to death. They eet forth on their Journey; and might hh Ht last long for France was bankrupt and the revolutionary govern-, mht atl AS Women | met with no adventure on the way had not Lysander be | : ment would have no support from financiers. But Edmund Burke Sz J foolish enough to tell Helena where they were going. ed — | Helena told Demetrius, who at once set out in pursuit challenged the believers in the doctrine to cite a single instance in| / And Helena fotlowed Demetrius. . en “any high spirited people ever laid down their arms | | buh pasa 44K ISON Bae tO. i brgthey is ‘or Inck of money.” | further untfl daylight. Hermia fell asleep on a m RRMA “4 : feu 3 bank. Lysander sl eT ree “Ea homs a International peace is coming in the world, and seems to be A Spell nearby. Demetrive, ath arching ™ | coming fast, but not because of any Inck of financicrs eager to profit of Magle. WhcTWiL THUEE EDERAL eC Re ene hyewar leans. It is coming thy spite of them, sik) was hunting ror Demetrius. Then it waa that the po Oberon, the fairy Icing, and had avenged himself by # who haunted the wood took a hand in the affair. ad just had a bitter quarret with hin wife Naving a miseht 18 trick at her expent Tht, ps, put him in a better humor, for he sent for hts fairy messenger, Puck, and bade him ¢ the eyes of the sleeping Demetrius with a magic her, ee that when Demetrius should awaken he would fall in love with the first woman he might chance to see. As Helena was nearby, Oberon supposed that Demetrive see her before his eyes should fall or y teturn her affection for him. It A CHANGE OF MGRALS. @h. ELIOT has told the people of Boston that! political conditions in this country to-day are | by no means so corrupt as they were in 1861.! Some of the appointments made by Lincoln, said | he, were more shocking than any that have been | made by recent Presidents. to sad blunders. Puck, finding Lysander asleep and mistaking him for Demetrius, touched ¢e sleeper’s eyes with the magic plant. Helena awoke and wandered on te where ee Gg . a3 y La i y SH-.-DON'TSAYAWORD)| | with her, forgetting all abote Herma. Helena, knowing that Lrsender wae ber } ; This is unquestionably true. The people ot | Bo’ Sisens4 PROGRESSIVE oe raise, ieeen fac naa élaceverea Sucka stake and tried to reotety tt by i 1861, absorbed in the vast issues of the abolition of slavery and the| jwe AREGOING 4 SHOW US tS FRING touching Demetrius's eyes with the plant. De:metrius awoke and went on tn @ile ' preservation of the Union, paid little attention to questions of per- | . \e ASS Ek CLOTHES eri Glill cawltg AAStAuce: “Dsecriae ow fralece: Gators EU: GoueeA 48 GUE i tonal character or official honesty. The standards of popular jndg- | JACKS Now = still vowing adoration. Derm: ma pefore i . Thus, by the power of magic, he fell in 10” Hermia now listened with horror to the own two recent su!tore were addressing to the bewildered Helena. The latter, although she was overjoyed at having s0 suddenly won Demetriase heart, was unable to account for Lysander's wootng. She was inclined to think herself the victim of a practical foke. ment were different from those that prevail now. Much that of-, fends us was accepted as a matter of course. In 1859 William Cullen Bryant wrote to his colleague of the Evening Post, John Bigelow, that Thurlow Weed had told Mr. | Opdyke and others that he intended to give charters for a set of | city railways to men who would furnish a fund of from four hun- | deed to six hundred thousand dollars for the Re in 1860. No boss would tell a secret like that in our Jay would keep it secret. ‘The two men, furlously Jealous of each other, deciéed A Pursuit to fight to the death for Helena’s hand. With érawm In the Dark. swords they rushed off into the woods to eeck e Aeting ecene for their duel. Puok, to atone for hie error, lures them away from each other in-the darkness, and by alternately mimicking the voice of each led them a tedious journey and brougit them back to the starting polnt so worn out that they tumbled te the groun@ asleep. Oberon then undid Puck's mischief by weaving certain charms over @e four sleepers. When they awoke at dawn Lysander and Hermia once move found themselves in love with one another, while Demetrius was equafiy én teve with Helena. ' | ‘Theseus and his court hunting in the forest, saw the four levers end | learned of their strange adventures, Hermia's father, finding that Demetrine mo | longer loved Hermia, was easily persuaded to give his daughter to Leander. publican campaign | No editor DEPEW’S SWAN SONG. X-SENATOR DEPEW’S swan song before the Re- publican Club was a rhapsody in three flighte— first, a jeer at insurgency; second, an exultation Hey for Bohemia! And Hey (Also H o) The Day’s Good Stories er ere ey 6 ea Seniy For Those Gay Bohemians, the Jarrs! et Mme te eS if eemed Familiar. Model Talk. The glorification of party came not ungrace. Ss x ‘ >, ‘wo great ve often Carele: Mr. and Mra, With that ™ X-GOV. HOARD ts crefited with te fo COMMERCIAL, traveller had heen vag fully from a statesman who, as he says, learned| By Roy L. McCardell. [iti trou be reat fin. I've often jof Oareiens Trabits i eats bet Terts RSE, Shes erus etd fn Wleconan politics a maoat ‘eloquent, ST ohildren to take | quette that actuates the married in tak. Dreilagy an Ti out, Mra. Jarr,” said Mrs, Rangle, plain-| ing the public differences of opinion be. talk belore tle M {4 Mr, Jarr. studios and have thore folly larke, and {tively appealing to her friend. ‘The best|tween other married persons very “!* for nearly an bour to @ abrew! ksire lnaness man. The ol fellow political principles from William H. Seward and practical politics | ¢gy MTS take the ladies to Bo- the children and go around to the sill of Chien from Thurlow Weed. Nor did the exultction over his own achieve- sar tt @ County Med plmaei, and. tive. trevelicr stl “Oh; how nice!" cried Mrs, | then dine at the dear littie places where |children, And it would be @ treat for| calmly, had taken no part in the discuss ee meg mn ae? Mr Meant was savtemd, tr take | « ical we vertad toy) 4 ments show any excess of bonstfulness on the part of a man whose Jarr and Mra, all the famous painters and novelists | them. They coud have some hot milk/#ion between the Rangles. But Mer. sims foge Mr, Hoard eave bw end breathed WHE ye enon tical career extends ov. . ; Rangie tn unison, |dine? The children would SO enjoy it.’ |and graham waters; or, maybe,one of|Jarr, seeing chance to intervene * #2 % cmtent. is at mr = Z er the crowded crises of our history for But Mr, Rangle| But, no! He don't do it.” thore ear, ptoturesque Italian women | again owing ¢o Mr. Rangle's surrender, --4r' mem Mie ton teat boven ow," anid mir appotnted pee: last fifty years. But the jeer at insurgency, though evidently demurred. “AM the celebrated artists and wnitera | who run the Bohemtan restaurants l!ke| now eald: intended for humor, the old negro attendant Xo, I have never been here before.”” hen yo must have taken the tathe tn Be waa the next question view with fat te pointe of t quently, per Limeelt’ of « was too harsh and too unjust to be passed with- Again le went 0 he hat to. sell-forcit ‘Never had. th “T_want @ome- dine at Deimontco's or places ike thet,”" |I have read of, would put on @ome sim-| “I'll take you to Spaghetint's, the only thing to eat when said Mr. Rangle, “Anyway, don't you | ple thing Ike botled rice for them. ‘Then | genuine Bohemian restaurant In New I dine out’ he think the kids are a little too young for at # o'clock, if the children got tired,|York. ‘There's where we had the good grumbled. the unconventional gayettes of the Land |we could bid the merry party adieu.” | times in the old days:" “Oh, of course! oan Good times were always had in Bohe- mia in the old days, They would have —. told you that {i owt rebuke. Why should « man of Mr. Depew’s eminence say the insurgent Democrats at Albany declared they would “never vote for an Irich- mam, @ Catholic or a Tammany man?” A chargo of that kind a the baths in Burope. 9 feel at home in thee 14 Yorkghirems thustaationfly: 1 that's the way turued to Me som and an he doesn't want) to go. That's be-| 1492, Mr. Jerr forgot) during the co! t was promptly a a Fr cause I'm along!" 2 ; that Bohemia was outgrown, like Toy-| made B ontes xpose a roorback, What 4 Mrs, Rangle, WW land, and ¥ its borders you | shall be said of it when uttered as a part of a statesman’s vale-| quickly, \ u m a 1 t e r es ne'er teens ead Getory? | “Aw, I tell you | D 2 ‘The party found ft's way into a crowd- | | ape Bereces Jointa are no good!" | 1a Oo g U SS § [et dasement, where, in a strata of | ‘Ien't that just Mite the man?” orled | THE GLASS CURTAIN. Mra, Rangle. “Mr. Jarr likes to take | HE troek | heavy atmosphere, part smoke and part made of ;80UP, & whole lot of people were pre- By Alma Woodward two ma- \tending they care there because they tertals ts in the j | hia wife around to the unconventional | iitked ft. ahatan, Y = + rs places. YOU go to them!" (Thts flarce- | Copyright, 1911, by the Frese Publisning Co, (The New York World), “An, we used t “striped ) UCH artistic credit will come to us because of ly.) "You go to them eo often that they | reget, y ‘ ee yerailt catal ate piasds tial Maia lad stripe the construction by our artisans of a stained |v0re you. Or, maybe, you are afraid 11) Cash and Credit. Lees rig arneety) — Fourd be eur- | wedged in ao tizht at a table that Mra. $. : V's meet some of your FRIENDS!" ridge ded t m on » glass theatre ourtain—the first of ite kind—vaet | er ne of 70" place” eat Mer dere | ok ‘ They're melt tookers most | Jere’ NO Mad hand {n In size, enormous in weight, marvellous in tech-| coming to the rescue of the unfortunate ways—heavy on giad rags, but awful her lap until Kl chair back, | “Well, as T was saying.” Mr, Jarr nique and glorious in beauty. Rangle, “where an get a good table @hote dinner with wine for fifty It is a pity, though, that this miracle of | cents’— Rangle shoved his ht on cash, people Ike you, Mis ays got the ready coin, Nae a ceeaanny ; xcel- the glass worker's art was made not for our own|. Pitt®’® MO such piace," ‘ind ny ape Ua = Re re t. Dear old heavier ma. city, nor for our own country, but for Mexico. thie avant . "een 2 land solid," but ebaor OREO EATER ai sory inlthed We have many “Patrons of Art.” Some of them are Hbaral; [752 cc ee Ce SUBEASES In SPGIO RI, Pasha nteasiaen Re | ane real t You should have heard i some of them are lavish, some of them are called “mun ficen sate Anat , you tol" me to tel cain, Gray, Bhou |orature, But to ty fsiesten | But their patronage runs to Europe and to the art of a time so . EH ROE 38 AGB S08. age ; eer Mcacelasalsextiow (uch i He] 8 nate kenasit t to him for ex- long past that the artist is but a mummy and his work but a curio.|semiens sult Mee R rade PTAC reel GiA Uny pres eran Inety-ats cents, } Mee a tecaiaanine Meh ane i ‘here are millions to buy old canvases bearing immortal namos but h 9 he says watt a mifute, please, sent to'the Island, and he couldn't nothing to help a new name win immortality ‘ No Monotony There! we t atl a A TEN Sy a broken ee Soh Sie a ed of ' The wonderful glass curtain, designed by the visions of our dollar Aftyst mt last week, | Aire, G. Cloudly)-Wdiths oh; Maltht “Those were the happy days!" ald dreamers, wrought by the skill of our artisans >) Mrs. I answering promptly)—What | Rangie, with a sneer. » Bors toa y that rot did he in sa iz it, hon? | “Ah, Bohemta, the land of fond com- s smaller than some of onr suburbs; that has no munificent pat a Q Sf t 5 ? (gently) y. have you got|radeships, true friendships, of bygone art, but has devoted five acros of land and $8,000,000 to| oe) TR Fee atau LAMA TERrreliriraltte Pan atrehn RAIL meine mild a palace and a temple to the art that is alive and has a soul | iN | Gray, he @ say not much company this week my table ex-| night that the t# and humorous i in it. : re He sald the boss's orde peuses have been terrible! | writers gave @ dinner to the editor of | - wal | pave nothin’ with no Mrs. 1. -Tf $f was any day but Frt- | a comic weekly and presented him with But New York cannot savo Madison Square Garden! \ as the cs your fist—then let ‘em go as day! T never have a cent by the time} a loving cup. One of the artiste hed a vital i sch Remains es i x <) far as Uke! Filday comes. Why, I had to get lamb |krouch because some of his drawings — Mrs. G. Uctly)-Fine business polloy, +a tew for dinner t aht . was ort! | had been refused and hit the editor must eay—does trade on those pi Janitor (who p e expect to bulld up a| Mrs, G, (in desp 1'd like to know 8 graft from that} r)-Oh, di Mrs, I.—What's the matter—parcel 6 from downtown C. 0, D.? \ over the head with the loving cup.” ‘Pine!’ growled Mr. Rangle. ‘Just ke Matteawan Letters From the People rrnerernernny particular laundry for recommending Mrs. @.-- It's the In it's a nice place and respecta- to new tenants)—Well, now, Mis' 9% cents and I've only got ‘sald Mra, Rangle. “And ft'e nice Yeo. f safety tt would avo you mustn't be too hard on ‘em 3) won't leave ft! | Mr, Jare to bring us and his wife Te the Eaitor of The Frentng World f disaster and \4e @ groat neighborhood for people| Janitor (coming to the rescue)—I could | he DIA Natian Halo te school in ¢ IT showd ® ‘ | movin’! Why, s of times you whistle | commodate you with 69 cents, Mi! “Hu It's because it's cheap!” said Dress, Pattern No. 7000 neetiout before he entered the Laat Sona about the 1 for thelr garbage one afternoon an’ | Gray, wntll your old man gets pata off, | the disgruntled Rangle. of material hes wide, 2% Pet S yard ‘ ; v—_? AR, [Simaatrous mishap tn Con y chat with you nice and pleasant G, (horrite calming down) e," said Mr. Jarr, solemnly, “I) the blouse and siirt, . aaa earn F Dynamite in the Day. omer WR you please, an* next afternoon | that would be very nice of you, {don't lke to interfere, but do you wish| | Pattern No. 74 , f see, Te fhe Rive of The Vrening Wont lececec aaa Bata ~ - fe up wad ‘ky Bone, DAS | juuitor, and TUi send it down as goon as} to break up che frieudsnip of a iite:| Stow Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION 1 wae with interest that 1 read about | On wha’ co pple Sunday fall SSS) ge—any janitor on the block |Mr, Gray comes home. jtime?” | re BUREAU, Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or send by | the cargoes of dynamite in New York | in i597 PAU ot | See = | will tell you the same thing (The laundry boy 18 appeased and tho| “If that's the only way to get out of mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO,, 132 E. Twenty-third street, Bay endangering (he lives of many . “You must avold all sudden shocks; Mrs. Gray (gathering rage by the sec- | package sent up, Mre y closes her| this piace, yes!’ said the defiant Obtain {N, Y, Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. pesple whould mplosion ocour, If and excitemer ond)—Any business maa can judge be- | door). gle , i | | mmese IMPORTANT—Write your address nly and always! the would only be enerwetic and to to tooate a “What a chance! With my wife’s|twoen an honest customer and a dead-| Janitor (to no one In particular) —Geet) "Well, you may go, but I'l not!" said| foo lepecity aise wanted, Add two cents tor letter postage # ipo Load proper stops are taken vo hav, r n ‘own? Exeter bonnet bill likely to cor’s In| beat, and if he can’t he hasn't go any [Jt she moves before I whietle fer her| Mra, Rangie, burry, theme dangerous bouts rempyed to places | a H. | any minutes” business to be in business! garbaget! @o what could the poor man 4 \ a 8 a nena een ~ _ a ner nrc anna ne ee renner me ee